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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #67936 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/67936)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of Working Life of Women in the
-Seventeenth Century, by Alice Clark
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: Working Life of Women in the Seventeenth Century
-
-Author: Alice Clark
-
-Release Date: April 26, 2022 [eBook #67936]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: Fay Dunn, Barry Abrahamsen, and the Online Distributed
- Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was
- produced from images generously made available by The
- Internet Archive)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WORKING LIFE OF WOMEN IN THE
-SEVENTEENTH CENTURY ***
-
-
-
- STUDIES IN ECONOMICS AND POLITICAL SCIENCE
-
- Edited by
- The Director of the London School of Economics and Political Science
-
- No. 56 in the series of Monographs by writers connected
- With the London School of Economics and Political Science
-
- ------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- THE WORKING LIFE OF WOMEN
-
- IN THE
-
- SEVENTEENTH CENTURY
-
-
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- WORKING LIFE OF WOMEN
-
- IN THE
-
- SEVENTEENTH CENTURY
-
-
-
-
- BY
-
- ALICE CLARK
-
- Shaw Research Student of the London School of Economics and Political
- Science
-
-
-
-
- LONDON:
- GEORGE ROUTLEDGE & SONS, LTD.
- NEW YORK : E. P. DUTTON & CO.
-
- 1919
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- DEDICATED
- TO MY
- FATHER AND MOTHER
-
-
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- PREFACE
-
-
-THE investigation, whose conclusions are partly described in the
-following treatise, was undertaken with a view to discovering the actual
-circumstances of women’s lives in the Seventeenth Century.
-
-It is perhaps impossible to divest historical enquiry from all personal
-bias, but in this case the bias has simply consisted in a conviction
-that the conditions under which the obscure mass of women live and
-fulfil their duties as human beings, have a vital influence upon the
-destinies of the human race, and that a little knowledge of what these
-conditions have actually been in the past will be of more value to the
-sociologist than many volumes of carefully elaborated theory based on
-abstract ideas.
-
-The theories with which I began this work of investigation as to the
-position occupied by women in a former social organisation have been
-abandoned, and have been replaced by others, which though still only
-held tentatively have at least the merit of resting solely on
-ascertained fact. If these theories should in turn have to be discarded
-when a deeper understanding of history becomes possible, yet the picture
-of human life presented in the following pages will not entirely lose
-its value.
-
-The picture cannot pretend to be complete. The Seventeenth Century
-provides such a wealth of historical material that only a small fraction
-could be examined, and though the selection has been as representative
-as possible, much that is of the greatest importance from the point of
-view from which the enquiry has been made, is not yet available. Many
-records of Gilds, Companies, Quarter Sessions and Boroughs which must be
-studied _in extenso_ before a just idea can be formed of women’s
-position, have up to the present been published only in an abbreviated
-form, if at all.
-
-Another difficulty has been the absence of knowledge regarding women’s
-position in the years preceding the Seventeenth Century. This want has
-to some extent been supplied through the kindness of Miss Eileen Power,
-who has permitted me to use some of the material collected by her on
-this subject, but not yet published.
-
-The Seventeenth Century itself forms a sort of watershed between two
-very widely differing eras in the history of Englishwomen—the
-Elizabethan and the Eighteenth Century. Thus characteristics of both can
-be studied in the women who move through its varied scenes, either in
-the pages of dramatists or as revealed by domestic papers or in more
-public records.
-
-Only one aspect of their lives has been described in the present volume,
-namely their place in the economic organisation of society. This has its
-own special bearing on the industrial problems of modern times; but Life
-is a whole and cannot safely be separated into watertight departments.
-
-The productive activity which is here described was not the work of
-women who were separated from the companionship of married life and the
-joys and responsibilities of motherhood. These aspects of their life
-have not been forgotten, and will, I hope, be dealt with in a later
-volume, along with the whole question of girls’ education.
-
-How inseparably intertwined are these different threads of life will be
-shown by the fact that apprenticeship and service are left to be dealt
-with in the later volume as links in the educational chain, although in
-many respects they were essential features of women’s economic position.
-
-The conception of the sociological importance of past economic
-conditions for women I owe to Olive Schreiner, whose epoch-making book
-“Women and Labour” first drew the attention of many workers in the
-emancipation of women to the difference between reality and the commonly
-received generalisations as to women’s productive capacity. From my
-friend, Dr. K. A. Gerlach came the suggestion that I, myself, should
-attempt to supply further evidence along the lines so imaginatively
-outlined by Mrs. Schreiner. To Dr. Lilian Knowles I am indebted for the
-unwearied patience with which she has watched and directed my
-researches, and to Mrs. Bernard Shaw for the generous scholarship with
-which she assists those who wish to devote themselves to the
-investigation of women’s historic past.
-
-I should like here to express the deep sense of gratitude which I feel
-to those who have helped my work in these different ways, and to Mrs.
-George, whose understanding of Seventeenth Century conditions has
-rendered the material she collected for me particularly valuable. My
-thanks are also due to many other friends whose sympathy and interest
-have played a larger part than they know in the production of this book.
-
- _Mill Field,_
-
- _Street, Somerset._
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS
-
-
- I. INTRODUCTORY 1
-
- II. CAPITALISTS 14
-
- III. AGRICULTURE 42
-
- IV. TEXTILES 93
-
- V. CRAFTS AND TRADES 150
-
- VI. PROFESSIONS 236
-
- VII. CONCLUSION 290
-
- LIST OF AUTHORITIES 309
-
- LIST OF WAGES ASSESSMENTS 320
-
- INDEX 322
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER I
-
- INTRODUCTORY
-
-EFFECT of environment on Women’s development. Possible reaction on men’s
- development—Importance of seventeenth century in historic development
- of English women—Influence of economic position—Division of Women’s
- productive powers into Domestic, Industrial, and Professional—Three
- systems of Industrial Organisation—Domestic Industry—Family
- Industry—Capitalistic Industry or Industrialism—Definition of these
- terms—Historic sequence. Effect of Industrial Revolution on Women—in
- capitalistic class—in agriculture—in textile industries—in crafts and
- other trades. Transference of productive industry from married women
- to unmarried women—with consequent increase of economic independence
- for the latter and its loss for the former. Similar evolution in
- professions shows this was not due wholly to effect of capitalism.
-
-
-HITHERTO the historian has paid little attention to the circumstances of
-women’s lives, for women have been regarded as a static factor in social
-developments, a factor which, remaining itself essentially the same,
-might be expected to exercise a constant and unvarying influence on
-Society.
-
-This assumption has however no basis in fact, for the most superficial
-consideration will show how profoundly women can be changed by their
-environment. Not only do the women of the same race exhibit great
-differences from time to time in regard to the complex social instincts
-and virtues, but even their more elemental sexual and maternal instincts
-are subject to modification. While in extreme cases the sexual impulses
-are liable to perversion, it sometimes happens that the maternal
-instinct disappears altogether, and women neglect or, like a tigress in
-captivity, may even destroy their young.
-
-These variations deserve the most careful examination, for, owing to the
-indissoluble bond uniting the sexes, and the emotional power which women
-exert over men, the character of men’s development is determined in some
-sort by the development which is achieved by women. In a society where
-women are highly developed men’s characters are insensibly modified by
-association with them, and in a society where women are secluded and
-immature, men lack that stimulus which can only be supplied by the other
-sex.
-
-It may be true, as Goethe said, that the eternal feminine leadeth us
-onwards, but whether this be upwards or downwards depends upon the
-characters of individual women.
-
-Owing to the subtle reactions which exist between men and women and
-between the individual and the social organism in which he or she lives,
-accurate and detailed knowledge of the historic circumstances of human
-life becomes essential for the sciences of Sociology and Psychology. The
-investigation, of which the results are described in the following
-chapters, was undertaken with the object of discovering these
-circumstances as regards women in a limited field and during a short
-period.
-
-The economic field has been chosen because, though woman no more than
-man lives by bread alone, yet without bread assuredly she cannot live at
-all, and without an abundant supply of it she cannot worthily perform
-her maternal and spiritual functions. These latter are therefore
-dependent upon the source of her food supply. The economic position has
-a further attraction to the student because it rests upon facts which
-can be elucidated with some degree of certainty. When these have once
-been made clear the way will have been prepared for the consideration of
-other aspects of women’s lives.
-
-The period under review, namely the seventeenth century, forms an
-important crisis in the historic development of Englishwomen. The gulf
-which separates the women of the Restoration period from those of the
-Elizabethan era can be perceived by the most casual reader of
-contemporary drama. To the objection that the heroines of Shakespeare on
-the one hand and of Congreve and Wycherley on the other are creations of
-the imagination, it must be replied that the dramatic poet can only
-present life as he knows it. It was part of Shakespeare’s good fortune
-to live in a period so rich and vivid in its social life as was the
-reign of Elizabeth; and the objective character of his portraits can be
-proved by the study of contemporary letters and domestic papers.
-Similarly the characters of the Restoration ladies described in the
-diary of Samuel Pepys and by other writers, confirm the picture of
-Society drawn by Congreve.
-
-So profound a change occurring in the character of women indicates the
-seventeenth century as a period of special interest for social
-investigation, and consequently the economic position has been
-approached less from its direct effect upon the production of wealth
-than from its influence upon women’s development. The mechanical aspect
-has in fact only been touched incidentally; an attempt being rather made
-to discover how far the extent of women’s productive capacity and the
-conditions under which it was exercised affected their maternal
-functions and reacted upon their social influence both within and beyond
-the limits of the family.
-
-Generalisations are of little service for this purpose. Spinoza has said
-that the objects of God’s knowledge are not universals but particulars,
-and it is in harmony with this idea that the following chapters consist
-chiefly of the record of small details in individual lives which
-indicate the actual relation of women to business and production,
-whether on a large scale or a small. The pictures given are widely
-representative, including not only the women of the upper classes, but
-still more important, those of the “common people,” the husbandmen and
-tradesmen who formed the backbone of the English people, and also those
-of the tragic class of wage-earners, who, though comparatively few in
-numbers, already constituted a serious problem in the seventeenth
-century.
-
-In the course of the investigation, comparison is frequently made with
-the economic position of mediæval women on the one hand, and with
-women’s position under modern industrial conditions, on the other. It
-must be admitted, however, that comparisons with the middle ages rest
-chiefly on conjecture.
-
-Owing to the greater complexity of a woman’s life her productive
-capacity must be classified on different lines from those which are
-generally followed in dealing with the economic life of men.
-
-For the purposes of this essay, the highest, most intense forms to which
-women’s productive energy is directed have been excluded; that is to
-say, the spiritual creation of the home and the physical creation of the
-child. Though essentially productive, such achievements of creative
-power transcend the limitations of economics and one instinctively feels
-that there would be something almost degrading in any attempt to weigh
-them in the balance with productions that are bought and sold in the
-market or even with professional services. Nevertheless it must never be
-forgotten that the productive energy which is described in the ensuing
-chapters was in no sense alternative to the exercise of these higher
-forms of creative power but was employed simultaneously with them. It
-may be suspected that the influences of home life were stronger in the
-social life of the seventeenth century than they are in modern England,
-and certainly the birth-rate was much higher in every class of the
-community except perhaps the very poorest.
-
-But, leaving these two forms of creative power aside, there remains
-another special factor complicating women’s economic position, namely,
-the extent of her production for domestic purposes—as opposed to
-industrial and professional purposes. The domestic category includes all
-goods and services, either material or spiritual, which are produced
-solely for the benefit of the family, while the industrial and
-professional are those which are produced either for sale or exchange.
-
-In modern life the majority of Englishwomen devote the greater part of
-their lives to domestic occupations, while men are freed from domestic
-occupations of any sort, being generally engaged in industrial or
-professional pursuits and spending their leisure over public services or
-personal pleasure and amusement.
-
-Under modern conditions the ordinary domestic occupations of
-Englishwomen consist in tending babies and young children, either as
-mothers or servants, in preparing household meals, and in keeping the
-house clean, while laundry work, preserving fruit, and the making of
-children’s clothes are still often included in the domestic category. In
-the seventeenth century it embraced a much wider range of production;
-for brewing, dairy-work, the care of poultry and pigs, the production of
-vegetables and fruit, spinning flax and wool, nursing and doctoring, all
-formed part of domestic industry. Therefore the part which women played
-in industrial and professional life was in addition to a much greater
-productive activity in the domestic sphere than is required of them
-under modern conditions.
-
-On the other hand it may be urged that, if women were upon the whole
-more actively engaged in industrial work during the seventeenth century
-than they were in the first decade of the twentieth century, men were
-much more occupied with domestic affairs then than they are now. Men in
-all classes gave time and care to the education of their children, and
-the young unmarried men who generally occupied positions as apprentices
-and servants were partly employed over domestic work. Therefore, though
-now it is taken for granted that domestic work will be done by women, a
-considerable proportion of it in former days fell to the share of men.
-
-These circumstances have led to a different use of terms in this essay
-from that which has generally been adopted; a difference rendered
-necessary from the fact that other writers on industrial evolution have
-considered it only from the man’s point of view, whereas this
-investigation is concerned primarily with its effect upon the position
-of women.
-
-To facilitate the enquiry, organisation for production is divided into
-three types:
-
- (a) Domestic Industry.
- (b) Family Industry.
- (c) Capitalistic Industry, or Industrialism.
-
-No hard-and-fast line exists in practice between these three systems,
-which merge imperceptibly into one another. In the seventeenth century
-all three existed side by side, often obtaining at the same time in the
-same industries, but the underlying principles are quite distinct and
-may be defined as follows:
-
-(a) _Domestic Industry_ is the form of production in which the goods
-produced are for the exclusive use of the family and are not therefore
-subject to an exchange or money value.
-
-(b) _Family Industry_ is the form in which the family becomes the unit
-for the production of goods to be sold or exchanged.
-
-The family consisted of father, mother, children, household servants and
-apprentices; the apprentices and servants being children and young
-people of both sexes who earned their keep and in the latter case a
-nominal wage, but who did not expect to remain permanently as
-wage-earners, hoping on the contrary in due course to marry and set up
-in business on their own account. The profits of family industry
-belonged to the family and not to individual members of it. During his
-lifetime they were vested in the father who was regarded as the head of
-the family; he was expected to provide from them marriage portions for
-his children as they reached maturity, and on his death the mother
-succeeded to his position as head of the family, his right of bestowal
-by will being strictly limited by custom and public opinion.
-
-Two features are the main characteristics of Family Industry in its
-perfect form;—first, the unity of capital and labour, for the family,
-whether that of a farmer or tradesman, owned stock and tools and
-themselves contributed the labour: second, the situation of the workshop
-within the precincts of the home.
-
-These two conditions were rarely completely fulfilled in the seventeenth
-century, for the richer farmers and tradesmen often employed permanent
-wage-earners in addition to the members of their family, and in other
-cases craftsmen no longer owned their stock, but made goods to the order
-of the capitalist who supplied them with the necessary material.
-Nevertheless, the character of Family Industry was retained as long as
-father, mother, and children worked together, and the money earned was
-regarded as belonging to the family, not to the individual members of
-it.
-
-From the point of view of the economic position of women a system can be
-classed as family industry while the father works at home, but when he
-leaves home to work on the capitalist’s premises the last vestige of
-family industry disappears and industrialism takes its place.
-
-(c) _Capitalistic Industry_, or _Industrialism_, is the system by which
-production is controlled by the owners of capital, and the labourers or
-producers, men, women and children receive individual wages.[1]
-
-Footnote 1:
-
- The term “individual wages” is used here to denote wages paid either
- to men or women as individuals, and regarded as belonging to the
- individual person, while “family wages” are those which cover the
- services of the whole family and belong to the family as a whole. This
- definition differs from the common use of the terms, but is necessary
- for the explanation of some important points. In ordinary conversation
- “individual wages” indicate those which maintain an individual only,
- while “family wages” are those upon which a family lives. This does
- not imply a real difference in the wages, as the same amount of money
- can be used to support one individual in comfort or a family in
- penury. In modern times the law recognises a theoretic obligation on
- the part of a man to support his children, but has no power to divert
- his wages to that purpose. His wages are in fact recognised as his
- individual property. The position of the family was very different in
- the seventeenth century.
-
-Domestic and family industry existed side by side during the middle
-ages; for example, brewing, baking, spinning, cheese and butter making
-were conducted both as domestic arts and for industrial purposes. Both
-were gradually supplanted by capitalistic industry, the germ of which
-was apparently introduced about the thirteenth century, and gradually
-developed strength for a more rapid advance in the seventeenth century.
-
-While the development of capitalistic industry will always be one of the
-most interesting subjects for the student of political economy, its
-effect upon the position and capacity of women becomes of paramount
-importance to the sociologist.
-
-This effect must be considered from three stand-points:—
-
- (1) Does the capitalistic organisation of industry increase or
- diminish women’s productive capacity?
-
- (2) Does it make them more or less successful in their special
- function of motherhood?
-
- (3) Does it strengthen or weaken their influence over morals and
- their position in the general organisation of human society?
-
-These three questions were not asked by the men who were actors in the
-Industrial Revolution, and apparently their importance has hitherto
-escaped the notice of those who have written chapters of its history.
-
-Mankind, lulled by its faith in the “eternal feminine” has reposed in
-the belief that women remain the same, however completely their
-environment may alter, and having once named a place “the home” thinks
-it makes no difference whether it consists of a workshop or a boudoir.
-But the effect of the Industrial Revolution on home life, and through
-that upon the development and characters of women and upon their
-productive capacity, deeply concerns the sociologist, for the increased
-productive capacity of mankind may be dearly bought by the
-disintegration of social organisation and a lowering of women’s capacity
-for motherhood.
-
-The succeeding chapters will show how the spread of capitalism affected
-the productive capacity of women:—
-
-(1) In the capitalist class where the energy and hardiness of
-Elizabethan ladies gave way before the idleness and pleasure which
-characterised the Restoration period.
-
-(2) In agriculture, where the wives of the richer yeomen were
-withdrawing from farm work and where there already existed a
-considerable number of labourers dependent entirely on wages, whose
-wives having no gardens or pastures were unable to supply the families’
-food according to old custom. The wages of such women were too irregular
-and too low to maintain them and their children in a state of
-efficiency, and through semi-starvation their productive powers and
-their capacity for motherhood were greatly reduced.
-
-(3) In the Textile Trades where the demand for thread and yarn which
-could only be produced by women and children was expanding. The
-convenience of spinning as an employment for odd minutes and the
-mechanical character of its movements which made no great tax on eye or
-brain, rendered it the most adaptable of all domestic arts to the
-necessities of the mother. Spinning became the chief resource for the
-married women who were losing their hold on other industries, but its
-return in money value was too low to render them independent of other
-means of support. There is little evidence to suggest that women shared
-in the capitalistic enterprises of the clothiers during this period, and
-they had lost their earlier position as monopolists of the silk trade.
-
-(4) In other crafts and trades where a tendency can be traced for women
-to withdraw from business as this developed on capitalistic lines. The
-history of the gilds shows a progressive weakening of their positions in
-these associations, though the corporations of the seventeenth century
-still regarded the wife as her husband’s partner. In these corporations
-the effect of capitalism on the industrial position of the wage-earner’s
-wife becomes visible.
-
-Under family industry the wife of every master craftsman became free of
-his gild and could share his work. But as the crafts became capitalised
-many journeymen never qualified as masters, remaining in the outer
-courts of the companies all their lives, and actually forming separate
-organisations to protect their interests against their masters and to
-secure a privileged position for themselves by restricting the number of
-apprentices. As the journeymen worked on their masters’ premises it
-naturally followed that their wives were not associated with them in
-their work, and that apprenticeship became the only entrance to their
-trade.
-
-Though no written rules existed confining apprenticeship to the male
-sex, girls were seldom if ever admitted as apprentices in the gild
-trades, and therefore women were excluded from the ranks of journeymen.
-As the journeyman’s wife could not work at her husband’s trade, she
-must, if need be, find employment for herself as an individual. In some
-cases the journeyman’s organisations were powerful enough to keep wages
-on a level which sufficed for the maintenance of their families; then
-the wife became completely dependent on her husband, sinking to the
-position of his unpaid domestic servant.
-
-In the Retail and Provision Trades which in some respects were
-peculiarly favourable for women, they experienced many difficulties
-owing to the restrictive rules of companies and corporations; but where
-a man was engaged in this class of business, his wife shared his
-labours, and on his death generally retained the direction of the
-business as his widow.
-
-The history of brewing is one of the most curious examples of the effect
-of capitalism on women’s position in industry, for as the term
-“brewster” shows, originally it was a woman’s trade but with the
-development of Capitalism it passed completely from the hands of women
-to those of men.
-
-The tendency of capitalism to lessen the relative productive capacity of
-women might be overlooked if our understanding of the process was
-limited to the changes which had actually taken place by the end of the
-seventeenth century. No doubt the majority of the population at that
-time was still living under conditions governed by the traditions and
-habits formed during the period of Family and Domestic Industry. But the
-contrast which the life described in the following chapters presents to
-the life of women under modern conditions will be evident even to
-readers who have not closely followed the later historical developments
-of Capitalism.
-
-In estimating the influence of economic changes on the position of women
-it must be remembered that Capitalism has not merely replaced Family
-Industry but has been equally destructive of Domestic Industry.
-
-One unexpected effect has been the reversal of the parts which married
-and unmarried women play in productive enterprise. In the earlier stages
-of economic evolution that which we now call domestic work, _viz._,
-cooking, cleaning, mending, tending of children, etc., was performed by
-unmarried girls under the direction of the housewife, who was thus
-enabled to take an important position in the family industry. Under
-modern conditions this domestic work falls upon the mothers, who remain
-at home while the unmarried girls go out to take their place in
-industrial or professional life. The young girls in modern life have
-secured a position of economic independence, while the mothers remain in
-a state of dependence and subordination—an order of things which would
-have greatly astonished our ancestors.
-
-In the seventeenth century the idea is seldom encountered that a man
-supports his wife; husband and wife were then mutually dependent and
-together supported their children. At the back of people’s minds an
-instinctive feeling prevailed that the father furnished rent, shelter,
-and protection while the mother provided food; an instinct surviving
-from a remote past when the villein owed to his lord the labour of three
-or four days per week throughout the year in addition to the boon work
-at harvest or any other time when labour was most wanted for his own
-crops; surely then it was largely the labour of the mother and the
-children which won the family’s food from the yard-land.
-
-The reality of the change which has been effected in the position of
-wife and mother is shown by a letter to _The Gentleman’s Magazine_ in
-1834 criticising proposed alterations in the Poor Law. The writer
-defends the system then in use of giving allowances from the rates to
-labourers according to the number of their children. He says that the
-people who animadvert on the allowance system “never observe the cause
-from which it proceeds. There are, we will say, twenty able single
-labourers in a parish; twenty equally able married, with large families.
-One class wants 12s. a week, one 20s. The farmer, who has his choice of
-course takes the single.” The allowance system equalises the position of
-married and single. Formerly this inequality did not exist “_because it
-was of no importance to the farmer whether he employed the single or
-married labourer, inasmuch as the labourer’s wife and family could
-provide for themselves_. They are now dependent on the man’s labour, or
-nearly so; except in particular cases, as when women go out to wash, to
-nurse, or take in needlework, and so on. The machinery and manufactures
-have destroyed cottage labour—spinning, the only resource formerly of
-the female poor, who thus were earning their bread at home, while their
-fathers and husbands were earning theirs abroad.... In agricultural
-parishes the men, the labourers, are not too numerous or more than are
-wanted; but the families hang as a dead weight upon the rates for want
-of employment. The girls are now not brought up to _spin_—none of them
-know the art. They all handle when required, the hoe, and their business
-is weeding. Our partial remedy for this great and growing evil is
-allotments of land, which are to afford the occupation that the distaff
-formerly did; and so the wife and daughters can be cultivating small
-portions of ground and raising potatoes and esculents, etc., the while
-the labourer is at his work.”[2]
-
-Footnote 2:
-
- _Gentleman’s Magazine_, 1834, Vol. I., p. 531. _A Letter to Lord
- Althorp on the Poor Laws_, by Equitas.
-
-These far-reaching changes coincided with the triumph of capitalistic
-organisation but they may not have been a necessary consequence of that
-triumph. They may have arisen from some deep-lying cause, some tendency
-in human evolution which was merely hastened by the economic cataclysm.
-
-The fact that the evolution of women’s position in the professions
-followed a course closely resembling that which was taking place in
-industry suggests the existence of an ultimate cause influencing the
-direction in each case.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER II
-
- CAPITALISTS
-
-Term includes aristocracy and _nouveau riche_. Tendency of these two
- classes to approximate in manners—Activity of aristocratic women with
- affairs of household, estate and nation—Zeal for patents and
- monopolies—Money lenders—Shipping trade—Contractors—Joan Dant—Dorothy
- Petty—Association of wives in husbands’ businesses—Decrease of
- women’s business activity in upper classes—Contrast of Dutch
- women—Growing idleness of gentlewomen.
-
-
-PERHAPS it is impossible to say what exactly constitutes a capitalist,
-and no attempt will be made to define the term, which is used here to
-include the aristocracy who had long been accustomed to the control of
-wealth, and also those families whose wealth had been newly acquired
-through trade or commerce. The second group conforms more nearly to the
-ideas generally understood by the term capitalist; but in English
-society the two groups are closely related.
-
-The first group naturally represents the older traditional relation of
-women to affairs in the upper classes, while the second responded more
-quickly to the new spirit which was being manifested in English life. No
-rigid line of demarcation existed between them, because while the
-younger sons of the gentry engaged in trade, the daughters of wealthy
-tradesmen were eagerly sought as brides by an impoverished aristocracy.
-Therefore the manners and customs of the two groups gradually
-approximated to each other.
-
-At the beginning of the seventeenth century it was usual for the women
-of the aristocracy to be very busy with affairs—affairs which concerned
-their household, their estates and even the Government.
-
-Thus Lady Barrymore writes she is “a cuntry lady living in Ireland and
-convercing with none but masons and carpendors, for I am now finishing a
-house, so that if my govenour [Sir Edmund Verney] please to build a new
-house, that may be well seated and have a good prospect, I will give him
-my best advice gratis.”[3]
-
-Footnote 3:
-
- Verney Family, _Memoirs during the Civil War_, Vol. I., p. 210.
-
-Lady Gardiner’s husband apologises for her not writing personally to Sir
-Ralph Verney, she “being almost melted with the double heat of the
-weather and her hotter employment, because the fruit is suddenly ripe
-and she is so busy preserving.”[4] Their household consisted of thirty
-persons.
-
-Footnote 4:
-
- _Ibid._, Vol. I., p. 12.
-
-Among the nobility the management of the estate was often left for
-months in the wife’s care while the husband was detained at Court for
-business or pleasure. It was during her husband’s absence that
-Brilliana, Lady Harley defended Brampton Castle from an attack by the
-Royalist forces who laid siege to it for six weeks, when her defence
-became famous for its determination and success. Her difficulties in
-estate management are described in letters to her son:
-
-“You know how your fathers biusnes is neglected; and alas! it is not
-speaking will sarue turne, wheare theare is not abilltise to doo other
-ways; thearefore I could wisch, that your father had one of more
-vnderstanding to intrust, to looke to, if his rents are not payed, and I
-thinke it will be so. I could desire, if your father thought well of it,
-that Mr. Tomas Moore weare intrusted with it; he knows your fathers
-estate, and is an honnest man, and not giuen to great expences, and
-thearefore I thinke he would goo the most frugally way. I knowe it would
-be some charges to haue him and his wife in the howes; but I thinke it
-would quite the chargess. I should be loth to haue a stranger, nowe your
-father is away.”[5]
-
-Footnote 5:
-
- Harley, _Letters of Brilliana, the Lady_, pp. 146-7, 1641.
-
-“I loos the comfort of your fathers company, and am in but littell
-safety, but that my trust is in God; and what is doun to your fathers
-estate pleases him not, so that I wisch meselfe, with all my hart, at
-Loundoun, and then your father might be a wittnes of what is spent; but
-if your father thinke it beest for me to be in the cuntry, I am every
-well pleased with what he shall thinke best.”[6]
-
-Footnote 6:
-
- Harley, _Letters of Brilliana, The Lady_, p. 167, 1642.
-
-One gathers from these letters that in spite of her devotion and ability
-and his constant absence Sir E. Harley never gave his wife full control
-of the estate, and was always more ready to censure than to praise her
-arrangements; but other men who were immersed in public matters
-thankfully placed the whole burthen of family affairs in the capable
-hands of their wives.
-
-Lady Murray wrote of her father, Sir George Baillie, “He had no ambition
-but to be free of debt; yet so great trust and confidence did he put in
-my mother, and so absolutely free of all jealousy and suspicion, that he
-left the management of his affairs entirely to her, without scarce
-asking a question about them; except sometimes would say to her, ‘Is my
-debt paid yet?’ though often did she apply to him for direction and
-advice; since he knew enough of the law for the management of his own
-affairs, when he would take the time or trouble or to prevent his being
-imposed upon by others.”[7]
-
-Footnote 7:
-
- Murray (Lady), _Memoirs of Lady Grisell Baillie_, p. 13.
-
-Mrs. Alice Thornton wrote of her mother:
-
-“Nor was she awanting to make a fare greatter improvement [than her
-dowery of £2000] of my father’s estate through her wise and prudential
-government of his family, and by her care was a meanes to give
-opportunity of increasing his patrimony.”[8]
-
-Footnote 8:
-
- Thornton (Mrs. Alice), _Autobiography_, p. 101, (Surtees’ Society Vol.
- lxii.
-
-In addition to the Household Accounts those of the whole of Judge Fell’s
-estate at Swarthmore, Lancashire, were kept by his daughter Sarah. The
-following entries show that the family affairs included a farm, a forge,
-mines, some interest in shipping and something of the nature of a Bank.
-
-July 11, 1676, is entered: “To mᵒ Recᵈ. of Tho: Greaves wife wᶜʰ. I am
-to returne to London foʳ her, & is to bee pᵈ, to her sonn Jⁿᵒ. ffellꝑ
-Waltʳ. miers in London, 001. 00. 00.”
-
-Jan., 14, 1676-7, by money lent Wiƚƚm Wilson our forge Clarke till hee
-gett money in for Ireon sold 10. 0. 0.
-
-Aug. ye 9º 1677 by mᵒ “in expence at adgarley when wee went to chuse
-oare to send father 000. 00. 04.”
-
-Other payments are entered for horses to “lead oare.”[9] &c., &c.
-
-Footnote 9:
-
- Fell (Sarah), _Household Account Book_.
-
-In addition to those of her family Sarah Fell kept the accounts for the
-local “Monthly Meeting” of the Society of Friends, making the payments
-on its behalf to various poor Friends.
-
-One of the sisters after her marriage embarked upon speculations in
-salt; of her, another sister, Margaret Rous, writes to their mother:
-“She kept me in the dark and had not you wrote me them few words about
-her I had not known she had been so bad. But I had a fear before how she
-would prove if I should meddle of her, and since I know her mind wrote
-to her, being she was so wickedly bent and resolved in her mind, I would
-not meddle of her but leave her to her husbands relations, and her salt
-concerns, since which I have heard nothing from her. But I understand by
-others she is still in the salt business. I know not what it will
-benefit her but she spends her time about it. I have left her at
-present.”[10]
-
-Footnote 10:
-
- Crosfield (H. G.), _Life of Margaret Fox, of Swarthmore Hall_, p. 232,
- 1699.
-
-A granddaughter of Oliver Cromwell, the wife of Thos. Bendish, was also
-interested in the salt business, having property in salt works at
-Yarmouth in the management of which she was actively concerned. It was
-said of her that “Her courage and presence of mind were remarkable in
-one of her sex, ... she would sometimes, after a hard day of drudgery go
-to the assembly at Yarmouth, and appear one of the most brilliant
-there.”[11]
-
-Footnote 11:
-
- Costello, _Eminent Englishwomen_, Vol. III, p. 55.
-
-Initiative and enterprise were shown by Lady Falkland during her
-husband’s term of office in Ireland whither she accompanied him.
-
-“The desire of the benefit and commodity of that nation set her upon a
-great design: it was to bring up the use of all trades in that country,
-which is fain to be beholden to others for the smallest commodities; to
-this end she procured some of each kind to come from those other places
-where those trades are exercised, as several sorts of linen and woollen
-weavers, dyers, all sorts of spinners and knitters, hatters,
-lace-makers, and many other trades at the very beginning.”
-
-After a description of her methods for instruction in these arts the
-biographer continues: “She brought it to that pass that they there made
-broad-cloth so fine ... that her Lord being Deputy wore it. Yet it came
-to nothing; which she imputed to a judgment of God on her, because the
-overseers made all those poor children go to church; ... and that
-therefore her business did not succeed. But others thought it rather
-that she was better at contriving than executing, and that too many
-things were undertaken at the very first; and that she was fain (having
-little choice) to employ either those that had little skill in the
-matters they dealt in, or less honesty; and so she was extremely cozened
-... but chiefly the ill order she took for paying money in this ...
-having the worst memory in such things in the world ... and never
-keeping any account of what she did, she was most subject to pay the
-same things often (as she hath had it confessed to her by some that they
-have in a small matter made her pay them the same thing five times in
-five days).”[12]
-
-Footnote 12:
-
- _Falkland, (The Lady), Her Life_, pp. 18-20.
-
-Lady Falkland received small sympathy from her husband in her dealings
-with affairs—and though her methods may have been exasperating, their
-unfortunate differences were not wholly due to her temperament. He had
-married her for her fortune and when this was settled on their son and
-not placed in his control, his disappointment was so great that his
-affections were alienated from her.
-
-Of her efforts to further his interests Lord Falkland wrote to Lord
-Conway:
-
- “My very good Lord,
-
- By all my wife’s letters I understand my obligations to
- your Lordship to be very many; and she takes upon her to have
- received so manifold and noble demonstrations of your favour to
- herself, that she begins to conceive herself some able body in
- court, by your countenance to do me courtesies, if she had the
- wit as she hath the will. She makes it appear she hath done me
- some good offices in removing some infusions which my great
- adversary here (Loftus) hath made unto you ... it was high time;
- for many evil consequences of the contrary have befallen me
- since that infusion was first made, which I fear will not be
- removed in haste; and must thank her much for her careful pains
- in it, though it was but an act of duty in her to see me righted
- when she knew me wronged ... and beseech your Lordship still to
- continue that favour to us both;—to her, as well in giving her
- good counsel as good countenance within a new world and court,
- at such a distance from her husband a poor weak woman stands in
- the greatest need of to dispatch her suits,” ... etc., etc.
-
- “Dublyn Castle this 26th of July, 1625.”[13]
-
-Footnote 13:
-
- _Falkland (The Lady), Her Life_, pp. 131-132.
-
-Later he continues in the same strain:
-
- “... I am glad your Lordship doth approve my wife’s good
- affection to her husband, which was a point I never doubted, but
- for her abilities in agency of affairs, as I was never taken
- with opinion of them, so I was never desirous to employ them if
- she had them, for I conceive women to be no fit solicitors of
- state affairs for though it sometimes happen that they have good
- wits, it then commonly falls out that they have over-busy
- natures withal. For my part I should take much more comfort to
- hear that she were quietly retired to her mother’s in the
- country, than that she had obtained a great suit in the
- court.”[14]
-
-Footnote 14:
-
- _Ibid._, pp. 132-3.
-
-The sentiments expressed by Lord Falkland were not characteristic of his
-time, when husbands were generally thankful to avail themselves of their
-wives’ services in such matters.
-
-While Sir Ralph Verney was exiled in France, he proposed that his wife
-should return to England to attend to some urgent business. His friend,
-Dr. Denton replied to the suggestion:
-
- “... not to touch upon inconveniences of yʳ comminge, women were
- never soe usefull as now, and though yᵘ should be my agent and
- sollicitour of all the men I knowe (and therefore much more to
- be preferred in yʳ own cause) yett I am confident if yᵘ were
- here, yᵘ would doe as our sages doe, instruct yʳ wife, and leave
- her to act it wᵗʰ committees, their sexe entitles them to many
- priviledges and we find the comfort of them more now than
- ever.”[15]
-
-Footnote 15:
-
- _Verney Family_, Vol. II., p. 240, 646.
-
-There are innumerable accounts in contemporary letters and papers of the
-brave and often successful efforts of women to stem the flood of
-misfortune which threatened ruin to their families.
-
-Katharine Lady Bland treated with Captain Hotham in 1642 on behalf of
-Lord Savile “and agreed with him for the preservation of my lords estate
-and protection of his person for £1,000,” £320 of which had already been
-taken “from Lord Savile’s trunk at Kirkstall Abbey ... and the Captain
-... promised to procure a protection from the parliament ... for his
-lordships person and estate.”[16]
-
-Footnote 16:
-
- _Calendar State Papers_, Domestic, April 8, 1646.
-
-Lady Mary Heveningham, through her efforts restored the estate to the
-family after her husband had been convicted of high treason at the
-Restoration.[17]
-
-Footnote 17:
-
- _Hunter (Joseph), History and Topography of Ketteringham_, p. 46.
-
-Of Mrs. Muriel Lyttelton, the daughter of Lord Chancellor Bromley, it
-was said that she “may be called the second founder of the family, as
-she begged the estate of King James when it was forfeited and lived a
-pattern of a good wife, affectionate widow, and careful parent for
-thirty years, with the utmost prudence and economy at Hagley to retrieve
-the estate and pay off the debts; the education of her children in
-virtue and the protestant religion being her principal employ. Her
-husband, Mr. John Lyttelton, a zealous papist, was condemned, and his
-estates forfeited, for being concern’d in Essex’s plot.”[18]
-
-Footnote 18:
-
- Nash, _Hist. and Antiq. of Worcester_, Vol. I., p. 492. It appears by
- depositions in the Court of Chancery that she paid off £25,000 which
- was charged upon the estate, and only sold lands to the value of
- £8,854, _Ibid._, p. 496.
-
-Charles Parker confessed, “Certainly I had starved had I not left all to
-my wife to manage, who gets something by living there and haunting some
-of her kindred and what wayes I know not but I am sure such as noe way
-entangle me in conscience or loyalty nor hinder me from serving the
-King.”[19]
-
-Footnote 19:
-
- _Nicholas Papers_, Vol. I., p. 97. Charles Parker to Lord Hatton.
-
-Lady Fanshawe said her husband “thought it conveniente to send me into
-England again, ... there to try what sums I could raise, both for his
-subsistence abroad and mine at home.... I ... embarked myself in a hoy
-for Dover, with Mrs. Waller, and my sister Margaret Harrison and my
-little girl Nan, ... I had ... the good fortune as I then thought it, to
-sell £300 a year to him that is now Judge Archer in Essex, for which he
-gave me £4,000 which at that time I thought a vast sum; ... five hundred
-pounds I carried to my husband, the rest I left in my father’s agent’s
-hands to be returned as we needed it.”[20]
-
-Footnote 20:
-
- _Fanshawe (Lady), Memoirs of_, pp. 80-81.
-
-The Marquis of Ormonde wrote: “I have written 2 seuerall ways of late to
-my wife about our domestick affaires, which are in great disorder
-betweext the want of meanes to keepe my sonnes abroad and the danger of
-leaueing them at home.... I thank you for your continued care of my
-children. I haue written twice to my wife to the effect you speake of. I
-pray God shee be able to put it in execution either way.”[21]
-
-Footnote 21:
-
- _Nicholas Papers_, Vol. III., pp. 274-6. Marquis of Ormonde to Sir Ed.
- Nicholas, 1656.
-
-This letter does not breathe that spirit of confidence in the wife’s
-ability which was shown in some of the others and it happened sometimes
-that the wife was either overwhelmed by procedure beyond her
-understanding, or at least sought for special consideration on the plea
-of her sex’s weakness and ignorance.
-
-Sarah, wife of Henry Burton, gives an account of Burton’s trial in the
-Star Chamber, his sentence and punishment (fine, pillory, imprisonment
-for life) and his subsequent transportation to Guernsey, “where he now
-is but by what order your petitioner knoweth not and is kept in strict
-durance of exile and imprisonment, and utterly denied the society of
-your petitioner contrary to the liberties and privileges of this
-kingdome ... debarred of the accesse of friends, the use of pen, inck
-and paper and other means to make knowne his just complaintes,” and she
-petitions the House of Commons “to take her distressed condition into
-your serious consideracion and because your peticioner is a woman not
-knowing how to prosecute nor manage so great and weighty busines” begs
-that Burton may be sent over to prosecute his just complaint.[22]
-
-Footnote 22:
-
- _State Papers, Domestic_, cccclxxi. 36, Nov. 7, 1640.
-
-Similarly, Bastwick’s wife pleads that he is so closely imprisoned in
-the Isle of Scilly “that your petitioner is not permitted to have any
-access unto him, so that for this 3 yeares and upward hir husband hath
-been exiled from hir, and she in all this time could not obtayne leave,
-although she hath earnestly sued for it, neither to live with him nor so
-much as to see him, and whereas your peticioner hath many smale children
-depending uppon hir for there mauntenance, and she of hir selfe being
-every way unable to provide for them, she being thus separated from her
-deare and loving husband and hir tender babes from there carefull father
-(they are in) great straights want and miserie,” and she begs that her
-husband may be sent to England, “your Petitioner being a woman no way
-able to follow nor manage so great and weighty a cause....”[23]
-
-Footnote 23:
-
- _S.P.D._, cccclxxi. 37, 1640.
-
-The above efforts were all made in defence of family estates, but at
-this time women were also concerned with the affairs of the nation, in
-which they took an active part.
-
-Mrs. Hutchinson describes how “When the Parliament sat again, the
-colonel [Hutchinson] sent up his wife to solicit his business in the
-house, that the Lord Lexington’s bill might not pass the lower house ...
-she notwithstanding many other discouragements waited upon the business
-every day, when her adversaries as diligently solicited against her” a
-friend told her how “the laste statemen’s wives came and offered them
-all the information they had gathered from their husbands, and how she
-could not but know more than any of them; and if yet she would impart
-anything that might show her gratitude, she might redeem her family from
-ruin, ... but she discerned his drift and scorned to become an informer,
-and made him believe she was ignorant, though she could have enlightened
-him in the very thing he sought for; which they are now never likely to
-know much of, it being locked up in the grave.”[24]
-
-Footnote 24:
-
- _Life of Colonel Hutchinson_, by his Wife, pp. 334-336.
-
-Herbert Morley wrote to Sir William Campion in 1645:
-
-“I could impart more, but letters are subject to miscarriage, therefore
-I reserve myself to a more fit opportunity.... If a conference might be
-had, I conceive it would be most for the satisfaction of us both, to
-prevent of any possible hazard of your person. If you please to let your
-lady meet me at Watford ... or come hither, I will procure her a
-pass.”[25]
-
-Footnote 25:
-
- _Sussex Arch. Coll._, Vol. x., p. 5. To Sir William Campion from
- Herbert Morley, July 23rd, 1645.
-
-Sir William replied: “For any business you have to impart to me, I have
-that confidence in you, by reason of our former acquaintance, that I
-should not make any scruple to send my wife to the places mentioned; but
-the truth is, she is at present soe neare her time for lying downe, for
-she expects to be brought to bed within less than fourteen days, that
-she is altogether unfit to take soe long a journey....”[26]
-
-Footnote 26:
-
- _Ibid._, Vol. x., p. 6.
-
-A book might be wholly filled with a story of the part taken by women in
-the political and religious struggles of this period. They were also
-active among the crowd who perpetually beseiged the Court for grants of
-wardships and monopolies or patents.
-
-Ann Wallwyn writes to Salisbury soliciting the wardship of the son of
-James Tomkins who is likely to die.[27] The petition of Dame Anne
-Wigmore, widow of Sir Richard Wigmore, states that she has found out a
-suit which will rectify many abuses, bring in a yearly revenue to the
-Crown and give satisfaction to the Petitioner for the great losses of
-herself and her husband. Details follow for a scheme for a corporation
-of carriers and others.[28]
-
-Footnote 27:
-
- _C.S.P.D._ lxvii, 129, 1611.
-
-Footnote 28:
-
- _C.S.P.D._ clxii, 8, March 2, 1630.
-
-Dorothy Selkane reminds Salisbury that a patent has been promised her
-for the digging of coals upon a royal manor. The men who manage the
-business for her are content to undertake all charges for the discovery
-of the coal and to compensate the tenants of the manor according to
-impartial arbitrators. She begs Salisbury that as she has been promised
-a patent the matter may be brought to a final conclusion that she may
-not be forced to trouble him further “having alredie bestowed a yeres
-solicitinge therein.”[29] In 1610 the same lady writes again:—“I have
-bene at gte toyle and charges this yere and a halfe past as also have
-bene put to extraordinarie sollicitacion manie and sundry waies for the
-Dispatching of my suite ...” and begs that the grant may pass without
-delay.[30]
-
-Footnote 29:
-
- _S.P.D._ xlviii, 119, 22nd October, 1609.
-
-Footnote 30:
-
- _S.P.D._ liii, 131, April 1610.
-
-A grant was made in 1614 to Anne, Roger and James Wright of a licence to
-keep a tennis court at St. Edmund’s Bury, co. Suffolk, for life.[31]
-Bessy Welling, servant to the late Prince Henry, petitioned for the
-erecting of an office for enrolling the Apprentices of Westminster, etc.
-As this was not granted, she therefore begs for a lease of some
-concealed lands [manors for which no rent has been paid for a hundred
-years] for sixty-one years. The Petitioner hopes to recover them for the
-King at her own charges.[32] Lady Roxburgh craves a licence to assay all
-gold and silver wire “finished at the bar” before it is worked, showing
-that it is no infringement on the Earl of Holland’s grant which is for
-assaying and sealing gold and silver after it is made. This, it is
-pointed out, will be a means for His Majesty to pay off the debt he owes
-to Lady Roxburgh which otherwise must be paid some other way.[33]
-
-Footnote 31:
-
- _C.S.P.D._ lxxvii, 5 April 5, 1614.
-
-Footnote 32:
-
- _S.P.D._ cxi, 121, 1619.
-
-Footnote 33:
-
- _S.P.D._ clxxx, 66, 1624.
-
-A petition from Katharine Elliot “wett nurse to the Duke of Yorke” shows
-that there is a moor waste or common in Somersetshire called West Sedge
-Moor which appears to be the King’s but has been appropriated and
-encroached upon by bordering commoners. She begs for a grant of it for
-sixty years; as an inducement the Petitioner offers to recover it at her
-own costs and charges and to pay a rent of one shilling per acre, the
-King never previously having received benefit therefrom.[34] The
-reference by Windebank notes that the king is willing to gratify the
-Petitioner. Another petition was received from this same lady declaring
-that “Divers persons being of no corporation prefers the trade of buying
-and selling silk stockings and silk waistcoats as well knit as woven
-uttering the Spanish or baser sort of silk at as dear rates as the first
-Naples and also frequently vending the woven for the knit, though in
-price and goodness there is almost half in half difference.” She prays a
-grant for thirty-one years for the selling of silk stockings, half
-stockings and waistcoats, to distinguish the woven from the knit
-receiving from the salesmen a shilling for every waistcoat, sixpence per
-pair of silk stockings and fourpence for every half pair.[35]
-
-Footnote 34:
-
- _S.P.D._ cccxxiii, 109, 18th June, 1637.
-
-Footnote 35:
-
- _S.P.D._ cccxxiii., 7, _Bk. of Petitioners_, Car. I.
-
-Elizabeth, Viscountess Savage, points out that Freemen of the city enter
-into bond on their admittance with two sureties of a hundred marks to
-the Chamberlain of London not to exercise any trade other than that of
-the Company they were admitted into. Of late years persons having used
-other trades and contrived not to have their bonds forfeited, and the
-penalty belonging to His Majesty, she begs a grant of such penalties to
-be recovered at her instance and charge.[36]
-
-Footnote 36:
-
- _S.P.D._ ccciii., 65, Dec. 6th, 1635.
-
-The petition of Margaret Cary, relict of Thomas Cary Esquire, one of the
-Grooms of the Chamber to the King on the behalf of herself and her
-daughters, begs for a grant to compound with offenders by engrossering
-and transporting of wool, wool fells, fuller’s earth, lead, leather,
-corn and grain, she to receive a Privy Seal for two fourth-parts of the
-fines and compositions. Her reasons for desiring this grant are that her
-husband’s expense in prosecuting like cases has reaped no benefit of his
-grant of seven-eighths of forfeited bonds for the like offences. She
-urges the usefulness of the scheme and the existence of similar
-grants.[37]
-
-Footnote 37:
-
- _S.P.D._ cccvi., 27, 1635.
-
-Mistress Dorothy Seymour petitions for a grant of the fines imposed on
-those who export raw hides contrary to the Proclamation and thereby make
-coaches, boots, etc., dearer. The reference to the Petition states: “It
-is His Majesty’s gratious pleasure that the petitioner cause impoundr.
-to be given to the Attorney General touching the offences above
-mencioned ... and as proffyt shall arise to His Majesty ... he will give
-her such part as shall fully satisfy her pains and good endeavours.”[38]
-
-Footnote 38:
-
- _S.P.D._ cccxlvi., 2, Feb. 1st, 1637.
-
-The projecting of patents and monopolies was the favourite pursuit of
-fashionable people of both sexes. Ben Johnson satirises the Projectress
-in the person of Lady Tailebush, of whom the Projector, Meercraft says:
-
- ... “She and I now Are on a
- Project, for the fact, and venting Of a new kind of fucus (paint
- for Ladies) To serve the Kingdom; wherein she herself Hath
- travel’d specially, by the way of service Unto her sex, and
- hopes to get the monopoly, As the Reward of her Invention.”[39]
-
-Footnote 39:
-
- Jonson, (Ben.) _The Devil is an Ass_, Act III., Scene iv.
-
-When Eitherside assures her mistress:
-
- “I do hear
- You ha’ cause madam, your suit goes on.”
-
-Lady Tailebush replies:
-
- “Yes faith, there’s life in’t now. It is referr’d If we once see
- it under the seals, wench, then, Have with ’em, for the great
- caroch, six horses And the two coachmen, with my Ambler bare,
- And my three women; we will live i’ faith, The examples o’ the
- Town, and govern it. I’ll lead the fashion still.”...[40]
-
-Footnote 40:
-
- (_Ibid._), Act IV., Scene ii.
-
-From the women who begged for monopolies which if granted must have
-involved much worry and labour if they were to be made profitable, we
-pass naturally to women who actually owned and managed businesses
-requiring a considerable amount of capital. They not infrequently acted
-as pawn-brokers and moneylenders. Thus, complaint is made that Elizabeth
-Pennell had stolen “two glazier’s vices with the screws and
-appurtenances” and pawned them to one Ellianor Troughton, wife of Samuel
-Troughton broker.[41]
-
-Footnote 41:
-
- _Middlesex Co. Rec. Sess. Books_, p. 18, 1690.
-
-Richard Braithwaite tells the following story of a “Useresse” as though
-this occupation were perfectly usual for women. “Wee reade in a booke
-entituled the _Gift of Feare_, how a Religious Divine comming to a
-certaine Vseresse to advise her of the state of her soule, and instruct
-her in the way to salvation at such time as she lay languishing in her
-bed of affliction; told her how there were three things by her to be
-necessarily performed, if ever she hoped to be saved: She must become
-_contrite_ in heart ... _confesse_ her sins ... make _restitution_
-according to her meanes whereto shee thus replyed, _Two of those first I
-will doe willingly: but to doe the last, I shall hold it a difficulty;
-for should I make restitution, what would remaine to raise my children
-their portion?_ To which the Divine answered; _Without these three you
-cannot be saved. Yea but_, quoth shee, _Doe our Learned Men and
-Scriptures say so? Yes, surely_ said the Divine. _And I will try_,
-(quoth shee) _whether they say true or no, for I will restore nothing_.
-And so resolving, fearefully dyed ... for preferring the care of her
-posterity, before the honour of her Maker.”[42]
-
-Footnote 42:
-
- Braithwaite, (Richd.), _The English Gentleman_, p. 300, 1641.
-
-The names of women often occur in connection with the shipping trade and
-with contracts. Some were engaged in business with their husbands as in
-the case of a fine remitted to Thomas Price and Collet his wife for
-shipping 200 dozen of old shoes, with intention to transport them beyond
-the seas contrary to a Statute (5th year Edward VI) on account of their
-poverty.[43] Others were widows like Anne Hodsall whose husband, a
-London merchant, traded for many years to the Canary Islands, the
-greatest part of his estate being there. He could not recover it in his
-lifetime owing to the war with Spain and therefore his wife was left in
-great distress with four children. Her estate in the Canary Islands is
-likely to be confiscated, there being no means of recovering it thence
-except by importing wines, and it would be necessary to take pipe-staves
-over there to make casks to bring back the wines. She begs the council
-therefore “in commiseration of her distressed estate to grant a licence
-to her and her assignes to lade one ship here with woollen commodities
-for Ireland, To lade Pipe staves in Ireland (notwithstanding the
-prohibition) and to send the same to the Canary Islands.”[44]
-
-Footnote 43:
-
- Overall _Remembrancia, Analytical Index to_, p. 519, 1582.
-
-Footnote 44:
-
- _Council Register_, 8th August, 1628.
-
-Joseph Holroyd employed a woman as his shipping agent; in a letter dated
-1706 he writes re certain goods for Holland: that these “I presume must
-be marked as usual and forward to Madam Brown at Hull ...” and he
-informs Madam Hannah Browne, that “By orders of Mr. John Whittle I have
-sent you one packe and have 2 packes more to send as undʳ. You are to
-follow Mr. Whittle’s directions in shipping.”[45]
-
-Footnote 45:
-
- Holroyd, Joseph (Cloth Factor) and Saml. Hill (clothier), _Letter Bks.
- of_, pp. 18-25.
-
-In 1630 Margrett Greeneway, widow of Thos. Greeneway, baker, begged
-leave to finish carrying out a contract made by her husband
-notwithstanding the present restraint on the bringing of corn to London.
-The contract was to supply the East India Company with biscuit. Margrett
-Greeneway petitions to bring five hundred quarters of wheat to
-London—some are already bought and she asks for leave to buy the rest.
-The petition was granted.[46]
-
-Footnote 46:
-
- _C.R._, 3rd December, 1630.
-
-A Petition of “Emanuell Fynche, Wm. Lewis Merchantes and Anne Webber
-Widow on the behalfe of themselves and others owners of the shipp called
-the _Benediction_” was presented to the Privy Council stating that the
-ship had been seized and detained by the French and kept at Dieppe where
-it was deteriorating. They asked to be allowed to sell her there.[47]
-The name of another woman ship-owner occurs in a case at Grimsby brought
-against Christopher Claton who “In the behalfe of his Mother An Alford,
-wid., hath bought one wessell of Raffe of one Laurence Lamkey of Odwell
-in the kingdome of Norway, upon wᶜʰ private bargane there appeares a
-breach of the priviledges of this Corporation.”[48]
-
-Footnote 47:
-
- _S.P.D._ ccxxxvi., 45, 12th, April, 1633.
-
-Footnote 48:
-
- _Hist. MSS. Com._, 14 Rep., VIII., p. 284, 1655.
-
-In 1636 upon the Petition of Susanna Angell “widowe, and Eliz. her
-daughter (an orphan) of the cittie of London humbly praying that they
-might by their Lordshipps warrant bee permitted to land 14 barrels of
-powder now arrived as also 38 barrells which is daily expected in the
-_Fortune_ they paying custome and to sell the same within the kingdome
-or otherwise to give leave to transport it back againe into Holland from
-whence it came” the Officers of the customs were ordered to permit the
-Petitioners to export the powder.[49]
-
-Footnote 49:
-
- _S.P.D._ ccxcii., 24, March 23, 1636/7., _Proceedings of Gunpowder
- Commissioners_.
-
-Women’s names appear also in lists of contractors to the Army and Navy.
-Elizabeth Bennett and Thomas Berry contracted with the Commissioners to
-supply one hundred suits of apparel for the soldiers at Plymouth.[50]
-
-Footnote 50:
-
- _S.P.D._ xx., 62, Feb. 9th, 1626.
-
-Cuthbert Farlowe, Elizabeth Harper Widowe, Edward Sheldon and John
-Davis, “poore Tradesmen of London” petition “to be paid the £180 yet
-unpaid of their accounts” for furnishing the seamen for Rochelle with
-clothes and shoes “att the rates of ready money.”[51]
-
-Footnote 51:
-
- _S.P.D._ cxcvii., 64, July, 1631.
-
-A warrant was issued “to pay to Alice Bearden £100 for certain cutworks
-furnished to the Queen for her own wearing.”[52]
-
-Footnote 52:
-
- _S.P.D._, clix., 27th Jan. 1630.
-
-Edward Prince brought a case in the Star Chamber, v. Thomas Woodward,
-Ellenor Woodward, and Georg. Helliar defendants being Ironmongers for
-supposed selling of iron at false weights to undersell plaintiff.
-“Defendants respectively prove that they ever bought and sold by one
-sort of weight.”[53]
-
-Footnote 53:
-
- _S.P.D._, clxxxi., 138, 1630.
-
-For her tenancy of the Spy-law Paper Mill, Foulis “receaved from Mʳˢ.
-lithgow by Wᵐ. Douglas Hands 85 lib. for ye 1704 monie rent. She owes me
-3 rim of paper for that yeir, besydes 4 rim she owes me for former
-yeirs.”[54]
-
-Footnote 54:
-
- Foulis, Sir John, _Account Book_, 5th Jan., 1705.
-
-Joan Dant was one of the few women “capitalists” whose personal story is
-known in any detail. Her husband was a working weaver, living in New
-Paternoster Row, Spital Fields. On his death she became a pedlar,
-carrying an assortment of mercery, hosiery, and haberdashery on her back
-from house to house in the vicinity of London. Her conduct as a member
-of the Society of Friends was consistent and her manners agreeable, so
-that her periodic visits to the houses of Friends were welcomed and she
-was frequently entertained as a guest at their tables. After some years,
-her expenses being small and her diligence great, she had saved
-sufficient capital to engage in a more wholesale trade, debts due from
-her correspondents at Paris and Brussels appearing in her executor’s
-accounts. In spite of her success in trade Joan Dant continued to live
-in her old frugal manner, and when she applied to a Friend for
-assistance in making her will, he was astonished to find her worth
-rather more than £9,000. He advised her to obtain the assistance of
-other Friends more experienced in such matters. On their enquiring how
-she wished to dispose of her property, she replied, “I got it by the
-rich and I mean to leave it to the poor.”
-
-Joan Dant died in 1715 at the age of eighty-four. In a letter to her
-executors she wrote, “It is the Lord that creates true industry in his
-people, and that blesseth their endeavours in obtaining things necessary
-and convenient for them, which are to be used in moderation by all his
-flock and family everywhere.... And I, having been one that has taken
-pains to live, and have through the blessing of God, with honesty and
-industrious care, improved my little in the world to a pretty good
-degree; find my heart open in that charity which comes from the Lord, in
-which the true disposal of all things ought to be, to do something for
-the poor,—the fatherless and the widows in the Church of Christ,
-according to the utmost of my ability.”[55]
-
-Footnote 55:
-
- _British Friend_, II., p. 113.
-
-Another venture initiated and carried on by a woman, was an Insurance
-Office established by Dorothy Petty. An account of it written in 1710
-states that:—“The said _Dorothy_ (who is the Daughter of a Divine of the
-Church of _England_, now deceas’d) did Set up an _Insurance Office_ on
-_Births, Marriages, and Services_, in order thereby to serve the
-Publick, and get an honest Livelyhood for herself.... The said _Dorothy_
-had such Success in her Undertaking, that more Claims were paid, and
-more Stamps us’d for Policies and Certificates in her Office than in all
-other the like Offices in _London_ besides; which good Fortune was
-chiefly owing to the Fairness and Justice of her Proceedings in the said
-Business: for all the Money paid into the Office was Entered in one
-Book, and all the Money paid out upon Claims was set down in another
-Book, and all People had Liberty to peruse both, so that there could not
-possibly be the least Fraud in the Management thereof.”[56]
-
-Footnote 56:
-
- _Case of Dorothy Petty_, 1710.
-
-In 1622 the names of Mary Hall, 450 coals, Barbara Riddell, 450 coals,
-Barbara Milburne, 60 coals, are included without comment among the
-brothers of the fellowship of Hostmen (coal owners) of Newcastle who
-have coals to rent.[57] The name of Barbara Milburne, widow, is given in
-the Subsidy Roll for 1621 as owning land.[58] That these women were
-equal to the management of their collieries is suggested by the fact
-that when in 1623 Christopher Mitford left besides property which he
-bequeathed direct to his nephews and nieces, five salt-pans and
-collieries to his sister Jane Legard he appointed her his executrix,[59]
-which he would hardly have done unless he had believed her equal to the
-management of a complicated business.
-
-Footnote 57:
-
- _Newcastle and Gateshead, History of_, Vol. III., p. 242.
-
-Footnote 58:
-
- _Ibid._, p. 237.
-
-Footnote 59:
-
- _Ibid._, p. 252.
-
-The frequency with which widows conducted capitalistic enterprises may
-be taken as evidence of the extent to which wives were associated with
-their husbands in business. The wife’s part is sometimes shown in
-prosecutions, as in a case which was brought in the Star Chamber against
-Thomas Hellyard, Elizabeth his wife and John Goodenough and Hugh
-Nicholes for oppression in the country under a patent to Hellyard for
-digging saltpetre ... “in pursuance of his direction leave and authority
-... Nicholes Powell, Defendants servant, and the said Hellyard’s wife,
-did sell divers quantities of salt petre. More particularly the said
-Hellyard’s wife did sell to Parker 400 lbs. at Haden Wells, 300 or 400
-lbs. at Salisbury and 300 or 400 lbs. at Winchester at £9 the hundred.”
-Hellyard was sentenced to a fine of £1,000, pillory, whipping and
-imprisonment.
-
-“As touching the other defendant Elizabeth Hellyard the courte was fully
-satisfyed with sufficient matter whereupon to ground a sentence against
-the defendant Eliz. but shee being a wyfe and subject to obey her
-husband theyr Lord ships did forbeare to sentence her.”[60]
-
-Footnote 60:
-
- _S.P.D._, cclx., 21, 1634.
-
-Three men, “artificers in glass making,” beg that Lady Mansell may
-either be compelled to allow them such wages as they formerly received,
-or to discharge them from her service, her reduction of wages disabling
-them from maintaining their families, and driving many of them away.[61]
-Lady Mansell submits a financial statement and account of the rival
-glassmakers’ attempts to ruin her husband’s business, one of whom “hath
-in open audience vowed to spend 1000li, to ruine your petitioners
-husband joyninge with the Scottish pattentie taking the advantage of
-your petitioners husbands absence, thinckinge your petitioner a weake
-woman unable to followe the busines and determininge the utter ruine of
-your petitioner and her husband have inticed three of her workemen for
-windowe glasse, which shee had longe kepte att a weeklie chardge to her
-great prejudice to supplie the worke yf there should be anie necessitie
-in the Kingdome,” etc., etc., she begs justice upon the rivals, “your
-petitioner havinge noe other meanes nowe in his absence (neither hath he
-when he shall returne) but onelie this busines wherein he hath engaged
-his whole estate.”[62]
-
-Footnote 61:
-
- _S.P.D._, cxlviii., 52, 1623.
-
-Footnote 62:
-
- _S.P.D._, dxxi., 147. Addenda Charles I., 1625.
-
-Able business women might be found in every class of English society
-throughout the seventeenth century, but their contact with affairs
-became less habitual as the century wore away, and expressions of
-surprise occur at the prowess shown by Dutch women in business. “At
-_Ostend_, _Newport_, and _Dunkirk_, where, and when, the _Holland_ pinks
-come in, there daily the Merchants, that be but Women (but not such
-Women as the Fishwives of _Billingsgate_; for these _Netherland_ Women
-do lade many Waggons with fresh Fish daily, some for _Bruges_, and some
-for _Brussels_, etc., etc.) I have seen these Women-merchants I say,
-have their Aprons full of nothing but _English Jacobuses_, to make all
-their Payment of.”[63]
-
-Footnote 63:
-
- _England’s Way_, 1614. _Harleian Misc._, Vol. III., p. 383.
-
-Sir J. Child mentions “the Education of their Children as well Daughters
-as Sons; all which, be they of never so great quality or estate, they
-always take care to bring up to write perfect good Hands, and to have
-the full knowledge and use of Arithmetick and Merchant Accounts,” as one
-of the advantages which the Dutch possess over the English; “the well
-understanding and practise whereof doth strangely infuse into most that
-are the owners of that Quality, of either Sex, not only an Ability for
-Commerce of all kinds, but a strong aptitude, love and delight in it;
-and in regard the women are as knowing therein as the Men, it doth
-incourage their Husbands to hold on in their Trades to their dying days,
-knowing the capacity of their Wives to get in their Estates, and carry
-on their Trades after their Deaths: Whereas if a Merchant in England
-arrive at any considerable Estate, he commonly with-draws his Estate
-from Trade, before he comes near the confines of Old Age; reckoning that
-if God should call him out of the World while the main of his Estate is
-engaged abroad in Trade, he must lose one third of it, through the
-unexperience and unaptness of his Wife to such Affairs, and so it
-usually falls out. Besides it hath been observed in the nature of
-Arithmetick, that like other parts of the Mathematicks, it doth not only
-improve the Rational Faculties, but inclines those that are expert in it
-to Thriftiness and good Husbandry, and prevents both Husbands and Wives
-in some measure from running out of their estates.”[64]
-
-Footnote 64:
-
- Child, Sir J., _A New Discourse of Trade_, pp. 4-5. 1694.
-
-This account is confirmed by Howell who writes of the Dutch in 1622 that
-they are “well versed in all sorts of languages.... Nor are the Men only
-expert therein but the Women and Maids also in their common Hostries; &
-in Holland the Wives are so well versed in Bargaining, Cyphering &
-Writing, that in the Absence of their Husbands in long sea voyages they
-beat the Trade at home & their Words will pass in equal Credit. These
-Women are wonderfully sober, tho’ their Husbands make commonly their
-Bargains in Drink, & then are they more cautelous.”[65]
-
-Footnote 65:
-
- Howell, (Jas.), _Familiar Letters_, p. 103.
-
-This unnatural reversing of the positions of men and women was censured
-by the Spaniard Vives who wrote “In Hollande, women do exercise
-marchandise and the men do geue themselues to quafting, the which
-customes and maners I alowe not, for thei agre not with nature, yᵉ which
-hath geuen unto man a noble, a high & a diligent minde to be busye and
-occupied abroade, to gayne & to bring home to their wiues & families to
-rule them and their children, ... and to yᵉ woman nature hath geuen a
-feareful, a couetous & an humble mind to be subject unto man, & to kepe
-yᵗ he doeth gayne.”[66]
-
-Footnote 66:
-
- Vives, _Office and Duties of a Husband_, trans. by Thos. Paynell.
-
-The contrast which had arisen between Dutch and English customs in this
-respect was also noticed by Wycherley, one of whose characters, Monsieur
-Paris, a Francophile fop, describes his tour in Holland in the following
-terms: “I did visit, you must know, one of de Principal of de State
-General ... and did find his Excellence weighing Sope, jarnie ha, ha,
-ha, weighing sope, ma foy, for he was a wholesale Chandeleer; and his
-Lady was taking de Tale of Chandels wid her own witer Hands, ma foy; and
-de young Lady, his Excellence Daughter, stringing Harring, jarnie ...
-his Son, (for he had but one) was making the Tour of France, etc. in a
-Coach and six.”[67]
-
-Footnote 67:
-
- Wycherley, _The Gentleman Dancing Master_, p. 21.
-
-The picture is obviously intended to throw ridicule on the neighbouring
-state, of whose navy and commercial progress England stood at that time
-in considerable fear.
-
-How rapidly the active, hardy life of the Elizabethan gentlewoman was
-being transformed into the idleness and dependence which has
-characterised the lady of a later age may be judged by Mary Astell’s
-comment on “Ladies of Quality.” She says, “They are placed in a
-condition which makes that which is everyone’s chief business to be
-their only employ. They have nothing to do but to glorify God and to
-benefit their neighbours.”[68] After a study of the Restoration Drama it
-may be doubted whether the ladies of that period wished to employ their
-leisure over these praiseworthy objects. But had they the will,
-ignorance of life and inexperience in affairs are qualifications which
-perhaps would not have increased the effectiveness of their efforts in
-either direction.
-
-Footnote 68:
-
- Astell, (Mary), _A Serious Proposal_, p. 145, 1694.
-
-The proof of the change which was taking place in the scope of
-upper-class women’s interests does not rest only upon individual
-examples such as those which have been quoted, though these instances
-have been selected for the most part on account of their representative
-character.
-
-It is quite clear that the occupation of ladies with their husband’s
-affairs was accepted as a matter of course throughout the earlier part
-of the century, and it is only after the Restoration that a change of
-fashion in this respect becomes evident. Pepys, whose milieu was typical
-of the new social order, after a call upon Mr. Bland, commented with
-surprised pleasure on Mrs. Bland’s interest in her husband’s affairs.
-“Then to eat a dish of anchovies,” he says “and drink wine and syder and
-very merry, but above all things, pleased to hear Mrs. Bland talk like a
-merchant in her husband’s business very well, and it seems she do
-understand it and perform a great deal.”[69] The capacity of a woman to
-understand her husband’s business seldom aroused comment earlier in the
-century, and would have passed unnoticed even by many of Pepys’
-contemporaries who lived in a different set. Further evidence of women’s
-business capacity is found in the fact that men generally expected their
-wives would prove equal to the administration of their estates after
-their death, and thus the wife was habitually appointed executrix often
-even the sole executrix of wills. This custom was certainly declining in
-the latter part of the century. The winding up of a complicated estate
-and still more the prosecution of an extensive business, could not have
-been successfully undertaken by persons who hitherto had led lives of
-idleness, unacquainted with the direction of affairs.
-
-Footnote 69:
-
- Pepys, (Sam.), _Diary_, Vol. II., p. 113, Dec. 31, 1662.
-
-That men did not at this time regard marriage as necessarily involving
-the assumption of a serious economic burden, but on the contrary, often
-considered it to be a step which was likely to strengthen them in life’s
-battles, is also significant. This attitude was partly due to the
-provision of a dot by fathers of brides, but there were other ways in
-which the wife contributed to the support of her household. Thus in a
-wedding sermon woman is likened to a merchant’s ship, for “She bringeth
-her food from far” ... not meaning she is to be chosen for her dowry,
-“for the worst wives may have the best portions, ... a good wife tho’
-she bring nothing in with her, yet, thro’ her Wisdom and Diligence great
-things come in by her; she brings in with her hands, for, _She putteth
-her hands to the wheel_.... If she be too high to stain her Hands with
-bodily Labour, yet she bringeth in with her Eye, for, _She overseeth the
-Ways of her Household_, ... and eateth not the Bread of _Idleness_.” She
-provides the necessities of life. “If she will have Bread, she must not
-always buy it, but she must sow it, and reap it and grind it, ... She
-must knead it, and make it into bread. Or if she will have Cloth, she
-must not always run to the Shop or to the score but she begins at the
-seed, she carrieth her seed to the Ground, she gathereth Flax, of her
-Flax she spinneth a Thread, of her Thread she weaveth Cloth, and so she
-comes by her coat.”[70]
-
-Footnote 70:
-
- Wilkinson, (Robert), _Conjugal Duty_, pp. 13-17.
-
-The woman here described was the mistress of a large household, who
-found scope for her productive energy within the limits of domestic
-industry, but it has been shown that the married woman often went
-farther than this, and engaged in trade either as her husband’s
-assistant or even on her own account.
-
-The effect of such work on the development of women’s characters was
-very great, for any sort of productive, that is to say, creative work,
-provides a discipline and stimulus to growth essentially different from
-any which can be acquired in a life devoted to spending money and the
-cultivation of ornamental qualities.
-
-The effect on social relations was also marked, for their work implied
-an association of men and women through a wide range of human interests
-and a consequent development of society along organic rather than
-mechanical lines. The relation between husband and wife which obtained
-most usually among the upper classes in England at the opening of the
-seventeenth century, appears indeed to have been that of partnership;
-the chief responsibility for the care of children and the management and
-provisioning of her household resting on the wife’s shoulders, while in
-business matters she was her husband’s lieutenant. The wife was subject
-to her husband, her life was generally an arduous one, but she was by no
-means regarded as his servant. A comradeship existed between them which
-was stimulating and inspiring to both. The ladies of the Elizabethan
-period possessed courage, initiative, resourcefulness and wit in a high
-degree. Society expected them to play a great part in the national life
-and they rose to the occasion; perhaps it was partly the comradeship
-with their husbands in the struggle for existence which developed in
-them qualities which had otherwise atrophied.
-
-Certainly the more circumscribed lives of the Restoration ladies show a
-marked contrast in this respect, for they appear but shadows of the
-vigorous personalities of their grandmothers. Prominent amongst the many
-influences which conspired together to produce so rapid a decline in the
-physique, efficiency and morale of upper-class women, must be reckoned
-the spread of the capitalistic organisation of industry, which by the
-rapid growth of wealth made possible the idleness of growing numbers of
-women. Simultaneously the gradual perfecting by men of their separate
-organisations for trade purposes rendered them independent of the
-services of their wives and families for the prosecution of their
-undertakings. Though the stern hand of economic necessity was thus
-withdrawn from the control of women’s development in the upper classes,
-it was still potent in determining their destiny amongst the “common
-people,” whose circumstances will be examined in detail in the following
-chapters.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER III
-
- AGRICULTURE
-
-Agriculture England’s leading Industry—Has provided the most vigorous
- stock of English race—Division into three classes:—
-
- (A) _Farmers._ Portraits of Farmers’ Wives—Fitzherbert’s
- “Prologue for the Wyves Occupacyon.” Size of household—The Wife
- who “doth not take the pains and charge upon her.” Financial
- aptitude—Market—Occupation of gentlewomen with Dairy and
- Poultry—Expectation of the wife’s ability to work and do service.
-
- (B) _Husbandmen._ Economy of their Small Holding—The more they worked
- for wages the greater their poverty—Strenuous but healthy life of the
- women—Extent to which they worked for wages—Character of work—Best’s
- account of Yorkshire Farms—other descriptions. Spinning—The wife’s
- industry no less constant when not working for wages, but more
- profitable to her family, whom she clothed and fed by domestic
- industry.
-
- (C) _Wage-earners._ Maximum rates of wages fixed at Assizes represent
- generally those actually paid. Common labourers’ wage, winter and
- summer—Women’s wages seasonal—Not expected when married to work week
- in, week out. Cost of living—Cost of labourers’ diet—Pensions and
- Allowances—Poor Relief—Cost of clothes and rent—Joint wages of father
- and mother insufficient to rear three children—Recognised insolvency
- of Labourers’ Family—Disputes concerning labourers’ settlements.
- Farmers’ need for more labourers—Demoralisation—Demand for sureties
- by the Parish. Infant mortality—Life history of labourers’
- wives—Explanation for magistrates’ action in fixing maximum wages
- below subsistence level—Proportion of wage-earning families.
-
-
-ALTHOUGH the woollen trade loomed very large upon the political horizon
-because it was a chief source of revenue to the Crown and because
-rapidly acquired wealth gave an influence to clothiers and wool
-merchants out of proportion to their numbers, agriculture was still
-England’s chief industry in the seventeenth century.
-
-The town population has had a tendency to wear out and must be recruited
-from rural districts. The village communities which still persisted at
-this period in England, provided a vigorous stock, from which the men
-whose initiative, energy and courage have made England famous during the
-last two centuries were largely descended. Not only were the farming
-families prolific in numbers but they maintained a high standard of
-mental and moral virtue. It must be supposed therefore that the
-conditions in which they lived were upon the whole favourable to the
-development of their women-folk, but investigation will show that this
-was not the case for all members alike of the agricultural community,
-who may be roughly divided into three classes:
-
-(a) Farmers. (b) Husbandmen. (c) Wage-earners.
-
-(a) _Farmers_ held sufficient land for the complete maintenance of the
-family. Their household often included hired servants and their methods
-on the larger farms were becoming capitalistic.
-
-(b) _Husbandmen_ were possessed of holdings insufficient for the
-complete maintenance of the family and their income was therefore
-supplemented by working for wages.
-
-(c) _Wage-earners_ had no land, not even a garden, and depended
-therefore completely on wages for the maintenance of their families.
-
-In addition to the above, for whom agriculture was their chief business,
-the families of the gentry, professional men and tradesmen who lived in
-the country and smaller towns, generally grew sufficient dairy and
-garden produce for domestic consumption.
-
-The above classification is arbitrary, for no hard-and-fast division
-existed. Farmers merged imperceptibly into husbandmen, and husbandmen
-into wage-earners and yet there was a wide gulf separating their
-positions. As will be shown, it was the women of the first two classes
-who bore and reared the children who were destined to be the makers of
-England, while few children of the wage-earning class reached maturity.
-
-
- A. _Farmers._
-
-However important the women who were the mothers of the race may appear
-to modern eyes, their history was unnoticed by their contemporaries and
-no analysis was made of their development. The existence of vigorous,
-able matrons was accepted as a matter of course. They embodied the
-seventeenth century idea of the “eternal feminine” and no one suspected
-that they might change with a changing environment. They themselves were
-too busy, too much absorbed in the lives of others, to keep journals and
-they were not sufficiently important to have their memoirs written by
-other people.
-
-Perhaps their most authentic portraits may be found in the writings of
-the Quakers, who were largely drawn from this class of the community.
-They depict women with an exalted devotion, supporting their families
-and strengthening their husbands through the storms of persecution and
-amidst the exacting claims of religion.
-
-John Banks wrote from Carlisle Prison in 1648 to his wife, “No greater
-Joy and Comfort I have in this world ... than to know that thou and all
-thine are well both in Body and Mind ... though I could be glad to see
-thee here, but do not straiten thyself in any wise, for I am truly
-content to bear it, if it were much more, considering thy Concerns in
-this Season of the Year, being Harvest time and the Journey so
-long.”[71] After her death he writes, “We Lived Comfortably together
-many Years, and she was a Careful Industrious Woman in bringing up of
-her Children in good order, as did become the Truth, in Speech,
-Behaviour and Habit; a Meet-Help and a good Support to me, upon the
-account of my Travels, always ready and willing to fit me with
-Necessaries, ... and was never known to murmur, tho’ I was often
-Concerned, to leave her with a weak Family,... She was well beloved
-amongst good Friends and of her Neighbours, as witness the several
-hundreds that were at her Burial ... our Separation by Death, was the
-greatest Trial that ever I met with, above anything here below. Now if
-any shall ask, Why I have writ so many Letters at large to be Printed
-... how can any think that I should do less than I have done, to use all
-Endeavours what in me lay, to Strengthen and Encourage my Dear Wife,
-whom I so often, and for so many Years was made to leave as aforesaid,
-having pretty much concerns to look after.”[72]
-
-Footnote 71:
-
- Banks (John), _Journal_, p. 101, 1684.
-
-Footnote 72:
-
- Banks, (John), _Journal_, pp. 129-30.
-
-Of another Quaker, Mary Batt, her father writes in her testimony that
-she was “Married to _Phillip Tyler_ of _Waldon_ in the County of
-_Somerset_ before she attained the age of twenty years.... The Lord
-blessed her with Four Children, whereof two dyed in their Infancy, and
-two yet remain alive: at the Burial of her Husband, for being present,
-she had two Cows valued at Nine Pounds taken from her, which, with many
-other Tryals during her Widowhood, she bore with much Patience,... After
-she had remained a Widow about four Years, the Lord drew the affection
-of _James Taylor_ ... to seek her to be his Wife, and there being an
-answer in her, the Lord joyned them together. To her Husband her Love
-and Subjection was suitable to that Relation, being greatly delighted in
-his Company, and a Meet-Help, a faithful Yoak-fellow, ... and in his
-Absence, not only carefully discharging the duty as her Place as a Wife,
-but diligent to supply his Place in those affairs that more immediately
-concerned him.”[73] And her husband adds in his testimony, “My outward
-Affairs falling all under her charge (I, being absent, a Prisoner for my
-Testimony against Tythes) she did manage the same in such care and
-patience until the time she was grown big with Child, and as she thought
-near the time of her Travail (a condition much to be born with and
-pittyed) she then desired so much Liberty as to have my Company home two
-Weeks, and went herself to request it, which small matter she could not
-obtain, but was denyed; and as I understood by her, it might be one of
-the greatest occasions of her grief which ever happened unto her, yet in
-much Meekness and true Patience she stooped down, and quietly took up
-this her last Cross also, and is gone with it and all the rest, out of
-the reach of all her Enemies, ... Three Nights and Two Days before her
-Death, I was admitted to come to her, though I may say (with grief) too
-late, yet it was to her great joy to see me once more whom she so dearly
-loved; and would not willingly suffer me any more to depart out of her
-sight until she had finished her days, ... Her Sufferings (in the
-condition she was in) although I was a Prisoner, were far greater then
-mine, for the whole time that she became my Wife, which was some Weeks
-above Three Years, notwithstanding there was never yet man, woman, nor
-child, could justly say, she had given them any offence ... yet must ...
-unreasonable men cleanse our Fields of Cattle, rummage our House of
-Goods, and make such havock as that my Dear Wife had not wherewithal to
-dress or set Food before me and her Children.”[74]
-
-Footnote 73:
-
- Batt (Mary), _Testimony of the Life and Death of_, pp. 1-3, 1683.
-
-Footnote 74:
-
- Batt (Mary), _Testimony to Life and Death of_, pp. 5-7, 1683.
-
-The duties of a Farmer’s wife were described a hundred years earlier by
-Fitzherbert in the “Boke of Husbandrie.” He begins the “Prologue for the
-wyves occupacyon,” thus, “Now thou husbande that hast done thy diligence
-and laboure that longeth to a husband to get thy liuing, thy wyues, thy
-children, and thy seruauntes, yet is there other thynges to be doen that
-nedes must be done, or els thou shalt not thryue. For there is an olde
-common saying, that seldom doth ye husbande thriue without leue of his
-wyf. By thys saying it shuld seem that ther be other occupaciõs and
-labours that be most cõvenient for the wyfes to do, and how be it that I
-haue not the experience of all their occupacyions and workes as I haue
-of husbandry, yet a lytel wil I speake what they ought to do though I
-tel thẽ not how they should do and excersyse their labour and
-occupacions.
-
-“_A lesson for the wyfe_ ... alway be doyng of some good workes that the
-deuil may fynde the alway occupied, for as in a standyng water are
-engendred wormes, right so in an idel body are engendered ydel
-thoughtes. Here maie thou see yᵗ of idelnes commeth damnatiõ, & of good
-workes and labour commeth saluacion. Now thou art at thy libertie to
-chose whither waye thou wilte, wherein is great diversite. And he is an
-unhappye man or woman that god hath given both wit & reason and putteth
-him in choise & he to chose the worst part. Nowe thou wife I trust to
-shewe unto the diuers occupacions, workes and labours that thou shalt
-not nede to be ydel no tyme of yᵉ yere. What thinges the wife is bounde
-of right to do. Firste and principally the wyfe is bound of right to
-loue her husband aboue father and mother and al other men....
-
-“What workes a wyfe should do in generall. First in the mornyng when
-thou art wakéd and purpose to rise, lift up thy hãd & blis the & make a
-signe of the holy crosse ... and remembre thy maker and thou shalte
-spede muche the better, & when thou art up and readye, then firste swepe
-thy house; dresse up thy dyscheborde, & set al thynges in good order
-within thy house, milke yᵉ kie, socle thy calues, sile up thy milke,
-take up thy children & aray thẽ, & provide for thy husbandes
-breakefaste, diner, souper, & for thy children & seruauntes, & take thy
-parte wyth them. And to ordeyne corne & malt to the myll, to bake and
-brue withall whẽ nede is. And mete it to the myll and fro the myll, & se
-that thou haue thy mesure agayne besides the tole or elles the mylner
-dealeth not truly wyth the, or els thy corne is not drye as it should
-be, thou must make butter and chese when thou may, serue thy swine both
-mornyng and eueninge, and giue thy polen meate in the mornynge, and when
-tyme of yeare cometh thou must take hede how thy henne, duckes, and
-geese do ley, and to gather up their egges and when they waxe broudy to
-set them there as no beastes, swyne, nor other vermyne hurte them, and
-thou must know that all hole foted foule wil syt a moneth and al clouen
-foted foule wyl syt but three wekes except a peyhen and suche other
-great foules as craynes, bustardes, and suche other. And when they haue
-brought forth theyr birdes to se that they be well kepte from the gleyd,
-crowes, fully martes and other vermyn, and in the begynyng of March, of
-a lytle before is time for a wife to make her garden and to get as manye
-good sedes and herbes as she can, and specyally such as be good for the
-pot and for to eate & as ofte as nede shall require it muste be weded,
-for els the wede wyll ouer grow the herbes, and also in Marche is time
-to sowe flaxe and hempe, for I haue heard olde huswyues say, that better
-is Marche hurdes then Apryll flaxe, the reason appereth, but howe it
-shoulde be sowen, weded, pulled, repealed, watred, washen, dried, beten,
-braked, tawed, hecheled, spon, wounden, wrapped, & ouen. It nedeth not
-for me to shewe for they be wyse ynough, and thereof may they make
-shetes, bord clothes, towels, shertes, smockes, and suche other
-necessaryes, and therfore lette thy dystaffe be alwaye redy for a
-pastyme, that thou be not ydell. And undoubted a woman cannot get her
-livinge honestly with spinning on the dystaffe, but it stoppeth a gap
-and must nedes be had. The bolles of flaxe whan they be rypled of, muste
-be rediled from the wedes and made dry with the sunne to get out the
-seedes. How be it one maner of linsede called lokensede wyll not open by
-the sunne, and therefore when they be drye they must be sore bruien and
-broken the wyves know how, & then wynowed and kept dry til peretime cum
-againe. Thy femell hempe must be pulled fro the chucle hẽpe for this
-beareth no sede & thou muste doe by it as thou didest by the flaxe. The
-chucle hempe doth beare seed & thou must beware that birdes eate it not
-as it groweth, the hempe thereof is not so good as the femel hẽpe, but
-yet it wil do good seruice. It may fortune sometime yᵗ thou shalte haue
-so many thinges to do that thou shalte not wel know where is best to
-begyn. Thẽ take hede whiche thinge should be the greatest losse if it
-were not done & in what space it would be done, and then thinke what is
-the greatest loss & there begin.... It is cõvenient for a husbande to
-haue shepe of his owne for many causes, and then may his wife have part
-of the wooll to make her husbande and her selfe sum clothes. And at the
-least waye she may haue yᵉ lockes of the shepe therwith to make clothes
-or blankets, and couerlets, or both. And if she haue no wol of her owne
-she maye take woll to spynne of cloth makers, and by that meanes she may
-have a conuenient liuing, and many tymes to do other workes. It is a
-wiues occupacion to winow al maner of cornes, to make malte wash and
-wring, to make hey, to shere corne, and in time of nede to helpe her
-husbande to fyll the mucke wayne or donge carte, dryve the plough, to
-lode hey, corne & such other. Also to go or ride to the market to sell
-butter, chese, mylke, egges, chekens, kapons, hennes, pygges, gees, and
-al maner of corne. And also to bye al maner of necessary thinges
-belonging to a houshold, and to make a true rekening & accompt to her
-husband what she hath receyued and what she hathe payed. And yf the
-husband go to the market to bye or sell as they ofte do, he then to shew
-his wife in lyke maner. For if one of them should use to disceiue the
-other, he disceyveth him selfe, and he is not lyke to thryve, & therfore
-they must be true ether to other.”[75]
-
-Footnote 75:
-
- Fitzherbert (Sir Anth.), _Boke of Husbandrye_.
-
-Fitzherbert’s description of the wife’s occupation probably remained
-true in many districts during the seventeenth century. The dairy,
-poultry, garden and orchard were then regarded as peculiarly the domain
-of the mistress, but upon the larger farms she did not herself undertake
-the household drudgery. Her duty was to organise and train her servants,
-both men and women.
-
-The wages assessments of the period give some idea of the size of
-farmers’ households, fixing wages for the woman-servant taking charge of
-maulting in great farms, every other maulster, the best mayde servant
-that can brewe, bake and dresse meate, the second mayd servant, the
-youngest mayd servant, a woman being skilful in ordering a house, dayry
-mayd, laundry mayd, and also for the men servants living in the house,
-the bailiff of husbandry, the chief hinde, and the common man-servant,
-the shepherd, and the carter.
-
-That some women already aspired to a life of leisure is shown in an
-assessment for the East Riding of Yorkshire, which provides a special
-rate of wages for the woman-servant “that taketh charge of brewing,
-baking, kitching, milk house or malting, that is hired with a gentleman
-or rich yeoman, whose wife doth not take the pains and charge upon
-her.”[76]
-
-Footnote 76:
-
- Rogers (J. E. Thorold), _Hist. Agric. and Prices_, Vol. VI., pp.
- 686-9, assess. for Yorks, East Riding, Ap. 26, 1593.
-
-In addition to the management of the dairy, etc., the farmer’s wife
-often undertook the financial side of the business. Thus Josselin notes
-in his Diary: “This day was good wife Day with mee; I perceive she is
-resolved to give mee my price for my farme of Mallories, and I intend to
-lett it goe.” A few days later he enters “This day I surrendered
-Mallories and the appurtenances to Day of Halsted and his daughter.”[77]
-
-Footnote 77:
-
- Josselin (R), _Diary_, p. 86, April 9th, and 30th, 1650.
-
-The farmer’s wife attended market with great regularity, where she
-became thoroughly expert in the art of buying and selling. The journey
-to market often involved a long ride on horseback, not always free from
-adventure as is shown by information given to the Justices by Maud, wife
-of Thomas Collar of Woolavington, who stated that as she was returning
-home by herself from Bridgwater market on or about 7th July, Adrian
-Towes of Marke, overtook her and calling her ugly toad demanded her
-name; he then knocked her down and demanded her purse, to which, hiding
-her purse, she replied that she had bestowed all her money in the
-market. He then said, ‘I think you are a Quaker,’ & she denied it, he
-compelled her to kneel down on her bare knees and swear by the Lord’s
-blood that she was not, which to save her life she did. Another woman
-then came up and rebuked the said Towes, whereupon he struck her down
-‘atwhart’ her saddle into one of her panniers.[78]
-
-Footnote 78:
-
- _Somerset Quarter Sessions Records_, Vol. III, pp. 370-1, 1659.
-
-Market was doubtless the occasion of much gossip, but it may also have
-been the opportunity for a wide interchange of views and opinions on
-subjects important to the well-being of the community. While market was
-frequented by all the women of the neighbourhood it must certainly have
-favoured the formation of a feminine public opinion on current events,
-which prevented individual women from relying exclusively upon their
-husbands for information and advice.
-
-The names of married women constantly appear in money transactions,
-their receipt being valid for debts due to their husbands. Thus Sarah
-Fell enters in her Household Book, “Pd. Bridget Pindʳ in full of her
-Husband’s bills as appeares £3. 17s. 6d.”[79] by mᵒ pᵈ Anthony Towers
-wife in pᵗ foʳ manneʳ wee are to have of heʳ 1.00[80] to mᵒ Recᵈ. of
-Myles Gouth wife foʳ ploughing for her 1.04”[81]
-
-Footnote 79:
-
- _Fell (Sarah) Household Accounts_, p. 317, 1676.
-
-Footnote 80:
-
- _Fell (Sarah)_, _Household Accounts_, p. 339, 1676.
-
-Footnote 81:
-
- _Ibid._, p. 386, 1677.
-
-Arithmetic was not considered a necessary item in the education of
-girls, though as the following incident shows, women habitually acted in
-financial matters.
-
-Samuel Bownas had been sent to gaol for tithe, but the Parson could not
-rest and let him out, when he went to Bristol on business and spent two
-weeks visiting meetings in Wiltshire. After his return, while away from
-home a distant relation called and asked his wife to lend him ten pounds
-as he was going to a fair. She not thinking of tithe which was much
-more, lent it and he gave her a note, which action was approved by her
-husband on his return; but the relation returned again in Samuel
-Bownas’s absence to repay, and tore the note as soon as he received it,
-giving her a quittance for the tithe instead. She was indignant, saying
-it would destroy her husband’s confidence in her. The relation assured
-her that he would declare her innocence, but he could not have persuaded
-her husband, for “he would have started so many questions that I could
-not possibly have affected it any other way than by ploughing with his
-heifer.”[82]
-
-Footnote 82:
-
- _Bownas (Samuel)_, _Life_, pp. 116-17.
-
-Women’s names frequently occur in presentments at Quarter Sessions for
-infringements of bye-laws. The Salford Portmote “p’sent Isabell the wyef
-of Edmunde Howorthe for that she kept her swyne unlawfull, and did
-trespas to the corn of the said Raphe Byrom.”[83]
-
-Footnote 83:
-
- _Salford Portmote Records_, Vol. I, p. 3, 1597.
-
-Katharine Davie was presented “for not paving before her doore.” Mrs.
-Elizabeth Parkhurst for “layinge a dunghill anenst her barne and not
-makinge the street cleane.” Isabell Dawson and Edmund Cowper for the
-like and Mrs. Byrom and some men “for letting swyne go unringed and
-trespassinge into his neighbors corne & rescowinge them when they have
-beene sent to the fould.”[84] “Charles Gregorie’s wife complained that
-shee is distrained for 3s. for an amerciament for hoggs goeing in the
-Streete whereupon, upon her tendring of 3s. xijd is restored with her
-flaggon.”[85] The owner of the pig appears very often to be a married
-woman. At Carlisle in 1619: “We amarye the wief of John Barwicke for
-keping of swine troughes in the hye streyt contrary the paine and
-therefore in amercyment according to the orders of this cyttie,
-xiiid.”[86]
-
-Footnote 84:
-
- _Salford Portmote Records_, Vol. II., pp. 6-7, 1633.
-
-Footnote 85:
-
- Guilding, _Reading Records_, Vol. IV., p. 512, 1653.
-
-Footnote 86:
-
- Ferguson, _Municipal Records of Carlisle_, p. 278.
-
-Such women may often not have been farmers in the full sense of the
-word, but merely kept a few pigs to supplement the family income. Even
-the gentry were not too proud to sell farm and garden produce not needed
-for family consumption, and are alluded to as “... our Country Squires,
-who sell Calves and Runts, and their Wives perhaps Cheese and
-Apples.”[87]
-
-Footnote 87:
-
- Howell, _Familiar Letters_, p. 290, 1644.
-
-Many gentlewomen were proficient in dairy management. Richard
-Braithwaite writes of his wife:
-
- “Oft have I seen her from her Dayrey come
- Attended by her maids, and hasting home
- To entertain some Guests of Quality
- Shee would assume a state so modestly
- Sance affectation, as she struck the eye
- With admiration of the stander-by.”
-
-The whole management of the milch cows belonged to the wife, not only
-among farming people but also among the gentry. The proceeds were
-regarded as her pin-money, and her husband generally handed over to her
-all receipts on this account, Sir John Foulis for example entering in
-his account book: “June 30 1693. To my wife yᵉ pryce of yᵉ gaird kowes
-Hyde, £4 0 0.”[88]
-
-Footnote 88:
-
- Foulis (Sir John, of Ravelston), _Acct. Bk._, p. 158.
-
-Sometimes when the husband devoted himself to good fellowship, the farm
-depended almost entirely on his wife; this was the case with Adam Eyre,
-a retired Captain, who enters in his Dyurnall, _Feb. 10, 1647_, “This
-morning Godfrey Bright bought my horse of my wife, and gave her £5, and
-promised to give her 20s. more, which I had all but 20s. and shee is to
-take in the corne sale £4.” _May 18, 1647_, “I came home with Raph
-Wordsworth of the Water hall who came to buy a bull on my wife, who was
-gone into Holmefrith.”[89]
-
-Footnote 89:
-
- Eyre, (Capt. Adam), _A Dyurnall_, p. 16, p. 36.
-
-The business capacity of married women was even more valuable in
-families where the father wished to devote his talents to science,
-politics, or religion, unencumbered by anxiety for his children’s
-maintenance. It is said in Peter Heylin’s Life that “Being deprived of
-Ecclesiastical preferments, he must think of some honest way for a
-livelihood. Yet notwithstanding he followed his studies, in which was
-his chief delight.... In which pleasing study while he spent his time,
-his good wife, a discreet and active lady, looked both after her
-Housewifery within doors, and the Husbandry without; thereby freeing him
-from that care and trouble, which otherwise would have hindered his
-laborious Pen from going through so great a work in that short time. And
-yet he had several divertisements by company, which continually resorted
-to his house; for having (God be thanked) his temporal Estate cleared
-from Sequestration, by his Composition with the Commissioners at
-_Goldsmith’s Hall_, and this Estate which he Farmed besides, he was able
-to keep a good House, and relieve his poor brethren.”[90]
-
-Footnote 90:
-
- _Heylin, (Peter)_, pp. 18-19.
-
-Gregory King’s father was a student of mathematics, “and practised
-surveying of land, and dyalling, as a profession; but with more
-attention to _good-fellowship_, than mathematical studies generally
-allow: and, the care of the family devolved of course on the mother,
-who, if she had been less obscure, had emulated the most eminent of the
-Roman matrons.”[91]
-
-Footnote 91:
-
- King (Gregory), _Natural and Political Observations, etc._
-
-Adam Martindale’s wife was equally successful. He writes “about
-Michaelmas, 1662, removed my family from the Vicarage to a little house
-at Camp-greene, ... where we dwelt above three years and half.... I was
-three score pounds in debt, ... but (God be praised) while I staid there
-I paid off all that debt and bestowed £40 upon mareling part of my
-ground in Tatton.... If any aske how this could be without a Miracle, he
-may thus be satisfied. I had sent me ... £41 ... and the £10 my wife
-wrangled out of my successor, together with a table, formes and ceiling,
-sold him for about £4 more.”[92] Later on he adds “My family finding
-themselves straitened for roome, and my wife being willing to keep a
-little stock of kine, as she had done formerly, and some inconvenience
-falling out (as is usual) by two families under a roofe, removed to a
-new house not completely furnished.”[93]
-
-Footnote 92:
-
- _Martindale, (Adam),_ _Life_, p. 172.
-
-Footnote 93:
-
- _Ibid._, p. 190.
-
-That in the agricultural community women were generally supposed to be,
-from a business point of view, a help and not a hindrance to their
-husbands—that in fact the wife was not “kept” by him but helped him to
-support the family is shown by terms proposed for colonists in Virginia
-by the Merchant Taylors who offer “one hundred acres for every man’s
-person that hath a trade, or a body able to endure day labour as much
-for his wief, as much for his child, that are of yeres to doe service to
-the Colony.”[94]
-
-Footnote 94:
-
- Clode, (C.M.) _Merchant Taylors_, Vol. I., p. 323.
-
-
- B. _Husbandmen._
-
-Husbandmen were probably the most numerous class in the village
-community. Possessed of a small holding at a fixed customary rent and
-with rights of grazing on the common, they could maintain a position of
-independence.
-
-Statute 31 Eliz., forbidding the erection of cottages without four acres
-of land attached, was framed with the intention of protecting the
-husbandman against the encroachments of capitalists, for a family which
-could grow its own supply of food on four acres of land would be largely
-independent of the farmer, as the father could earn the money for the
-rent, etc., by working only at harvest when wages were highest. As
-however this seasonal labour was not sufficient for the farmers’
-demands, such independence was not wholly to their mind, and they
-complained of the idleness of husbandmen who would not work for the
-wages offered. Thus it was said that “In all or most towns, where the
-fields lie open there is a new brood of upstart intruders or inmates ...
-loiterers who will not work unless they may have such excessive wages as
-they themselves desire.”[95] “There is with us now rather a scarcity
-than a superfluity of servants, their wages being advanced to such an
-extraordinary height, that they are likely ere long to be masters and
-their masters servants, many poor husbandmen being forced to pay near as
-much to their servants for wages as to their landlords for rent.”[96]
-
-Footnote 95:
-
- Pseudonismus, _Considerations concerning Common Fields and
- Enclosures_, 1654.
-
-Footnote 96:
-
- Pseudonismus, _A Vindication of the Considerations concerning Common
- Fields and Enclosures_, 1656.
-
-The holdings of the husbandmen varied from seven acres or more to half
-an acre or even less of garden ground, in which as potatoes[97] were not
-yet grown in England the crop consisted of wheat, barley, rye, oats, or
-peas. Very likely there was a patch of hemp or flax and an apple-tree or
-two, a cherry tree and some elder-berries in the hedge, with a hive or
-two of bees in a warm corner. Common rights made it possible to keep
-sheep and pigs and poultry, and the possession of a cow definitely
-lifted the family above the poverty line.
-
-Footnote 97:
-
- Potatoes were already in use in Ireland, but are scarcely referred to
- during this period by English writers.
-
-Dorothy Osborne describing her own day to her lover, gives an idyllic
-picture of the maidens tending cows on the common: “The heat of the day
-is spent in reading or working, and about six or seven o’clock I walk
-out into a common that lies hard by the house, where a great many young
-wenches keep sheep and cows, and sit in the shade singing of ballads. I
-go to them and compare their voices and beauties to some ancient
-shepherdesses that I have read of, and find a vast difference there; but
-trust me, I think these are as innocent as those could be. I talk to
-them and find they want nothing to make them the happiest people in the
-world but the knowledge that they are so. Most commonly, when we are in
-the midst of our discourse, one looks about her, and spies her cows
-going into the corn, and then away they all run as if they had wings at
-their heels. I, that am not so nimble, stay behind, and when I see them
-driving home their cattle, I think ’tis time for me to retire too.”[98]
-
-Footnote 98:
-
- _Osborne (Dorothy), Letters_, pp. 103, 4. 1652-1654.
-
-Husbandmen have been defined as a class who could not subsist entirely
-upon their holdings, but must to some extent work for wages. Their need
-for wages varied according to the size of their holding and according to
-the rent. For copy-holders the rent was usually nominal,[99] but in
-other cases the husbandman was often forced to pay what was virtually a
-rack rent. Few other money payments were necessary and if the holding
-was large enough to produce sufficient food, the family had little cause
-to fear want.
-
-Footnote 99:
-
- 30s. Susanna Suffolke a young maid holds a customary cottage, ... and
- renteth per annum 2d.
-
- £28 Eliz. Filoll (widdow) holdeth one customary tenement. Rent per
- annum 26s. 8d.
-
- £2 Mary Stanes holdeth one customary cottage (late of Robert Stanes)
- and renteth per annum 7d.
-
- £12 Margaret Dowe (widdow) holdeth one customary tenement (her eldest
- son the next heir) rent 7s. 8d.
-
- Among freeholders. Johan Mathew (widow) holdeth one free tenement and
- one croft of land thereto belonging ... containing three acres and a
- half and renteth 3d.
-
- (Stones, Jolley. 1628. From a List of Copyholders in West & S.
- Haningfield, Essex.)
-
-Randall Taylor wrote complacently in 1689 that in comparison with the
-French peasants, “Our _English_ husbandmen are both better fed and
-taught, and the poorest people here have so much of brown Bread, and the
-Gospel, that by the Calculations of our _Bills_ of _Mortality_ it
-appears, that for so many years past but One of Four Thousand is
-starved.”[100]
-
-Footnote 100:
-
- Taylor. (Randall), _Discourse of the Growth of England, etc._, p. 96,
- 1689.
-
-The woman of the husbandman class was muscular and well nourished.
-Probably she had passed her girlhood in service on a farm, where hard
-work, largely in the open air, had sharpened her appetite for the
-abundant diet which characterised the English farmer’s housekeeping.
-After marriage, much of her work was still out of doors, cultivating her
-garden and tending pigs or cows, while her husband did his day’s work on
-neighbouring farms. Frugal and to the last degree laborious were her
-days, but food was still sufficient and her strength enabled her to bear
-healthy children and to suckle them. It was exactly this class of woman
-that the gentry chose as wet nurses for their babies. Their lives would
-seem incredibly hard to the modern suburban woman, but they had their
-reward in the respect and love of their families and in the sense of
-duties worthily fulfilled.
-
-The more prosperous husbandmen often added to their households an
-apprentice child, but in other cases the holdings were too small to
-occupy even the family’s whole time.
-
-At harvest in any case all the population of the village turned out to
-work; men, women, and children, not only those belonging to the class of
-husbandmen, but the tradesmen as well, did their bit in a work so
-urgent; for in those days each district depended on its own supply of
-corn, there being scarcely any means of transport.
-
-Except during the harvest, wages were so low that a man who had a
-holding of his own was little tempted to work for them, though he might
-undertake some special and better-paid occupation, such as that of a
-shepherd. Pepys, describing a visit to Epsom, writes: “We found a
-shepherd and his little boy reading, far from any houses or sight of
-people, the Bible to him, I find he had been a servant in my Cozen
-Pepys’s house ... the most like one of the old patriarchs that ever I
-saw in my life ... he values his dog mightily, ... about eighteen score
-sheep in his flock, he hath four shillings a week the year round for
-keeping of them.”[101]
-
-Footnote 101:
-
- Pepys, Vol. IV, p. 428. 14 July, 1667.
-
-Probably this picturesque shepherd belonged to the class of husbandmen,
-for the wages paid are higher than those of a household servant. Four
-shillings a week comes to £10.8.0 by the year, whereas a Wiltshire wages
-assessment for 1685 provided that a servant who was a chief shepherd
-looking after 1,500 sheep or more was not to receive more than £5 by the
-year.[102] On the other hand, four shillings a week would not maintain
-completely the shepherd, his boy and a dog, not to speak of a wife and
-other children. Thus, while the shepherd tended his sheep, we may
-imagine his wife and children were cultivating their allotment.
-
-Footnote 102:
-
- _Hist. MSS. Miss. Com. Var. Coll._, Vol. I. p. 170.
-
-The wages for the harvest work of women as well as men, were fixed by
-the Quarter Sessions.[103] References to their work may be found in
-account books and diaries. Thus Dame Nicholson notes: “_Aug. 13, 1690_,
-I began to sher ye barin croft about 11 o’clock, ther was Gordi Bar and
-his wife—also Miler’s son James and his sister Margit also a wife called
-Nieton—they sher 17 threv and 7 chivis.”[104]
-
-Footnote 103:
-
- A comparison of the assessments which have been preserved, in the
- different counties shows that men’s earnings varied in the hay harvest
- from:—
-
- 4d. and meat and drink, or 8d. without, to
- 8d. and meat and drink, or 1s. 4d. without
-
- and in the corn harvest from:—
-
- 5d. and meat and drink, or 10d. without, to
- 1s. and meat and drink, or 2s. without
-
- Women’s wages varied in the hay harvest from:—
-
- 1d. and meat and drink, or 4d. without, to
- 6d. and meat and drink, or 1s. without
-
- and in the corn harvest from:—
-
- 2d. and meat and drink, or 6d. without, to
- 6d. and meat and drink, or 1s. without
-
- The variations in these wages correspond with the price of corn in
- different parts of England and must not be regarded as necessarily
- representing differences in the real value of wages.
-
-Footnote 104:
-
- Society of Antiquarians of Scotland, vol. xxxix, p. 125. _Dame
- Margaret Nicholson’s Account Book._
-
-Best gives a detailed account of the division of work between men and
-women on a Yorkshire farm: “Wee have allwayes one man, or else one of
-the ablest of the women, to abide on the mowe, besides those that goe
-with the waines.[105] The best sort of men-shearers have usually 8d. a
-day and are to meate themselves; the best sorte of women shearers have
-(most commonly) 6d. a day.[106] It is usuall in some places (wheare the
-furres of the landes are deepe worne with raines) to imploy women, with
-wain-rakes, to gather the corne out of the said hollow furres after that
-the sweath-rakes have done.[107] ... We use meanes allwayes to gett
-eyther 18 or else 24 pease pullers, which wee sette allways sixe on a
-lande, viz., a woman and a man, a woman and a man, a woman or boy and a
-man, etc., the weakest couple in the fore furre ... it is usuall in most
-places after they gette all pease pulled, or the last graine downe, to
-invite all the worke-folkes and wives (that helped them that harvest) to
-supper, and then have they puddinges, bacon, or boyled beefe, flesh or
-apple pyes, and then creame brought in platters, and every one a spoone;
-then after all they have hotte cakes and ale; some will cutte theire
-cake and putte into the creame and this feaste is called the
-creame-potte or creame-kitte ... wee send allwayes, the daye before wee
-leade, [pease] two of our boys, or a boy and one of our mayds with each
-of them a shorte mowe forke to turn them.”[108]
-
-Footnote 105:
-
- Best, _Rural Economy_, p. 36.
-
-Footnote 106:
-
- _Ibid._ p. 42.
-
-Footnote 107:
-
- Best, _Rural Economy_, p. 59.
-
-Footnote 108:
-
- _Ibid._ pp. 93-4.
-
-For thatching, Best continues: “Wee usually provide two women for helpes
-in this kinde, _viz._, one to drawe thacke, and the other to serve the
-thatcher; she that draweth thacke hath 3d. a day, and shee that serveth
-the thatcher 4d. a day, because shee also is to temper the morter, and
-to carry it up to the toppe of the howse.... Shee that draweth thatch
-shoulde always have dry wheate strawe ... whearewith to make her bandes
-for her bottles. She that serveth will usually carry up 4 bottles at a
-time, and sometimes but 3 if the thatch bee longe and very wette.”[109]
-
-Footnote 109:
-
- _Ibid._, pp. 138-9. “The thatchers,” Best says, “have in most places
- 6d. a day & theire meate in Summer time, ... yett we neaver use to
- give them above 4d ... because their dyett is not as in other places;
- for they are to have three meale a day, viz. theire breakfaste att
- eight of the clocke, ... theire dinner about twelve and theire supper
- about seaven or after when they leave worke; and att each meale fower
- services, viz. butter, milke, cheese, and either egges, pyes, or
- bacon, and sometimes porridge insteade of milke: if they meate
- themselves they have usually 10d. a day.”
-
-“Spreaders of mucke and molehills are (for the most parte) women, boyes
-and girles, the bigger and abler sorte of which have usually 3d. a day,
-and the lesser sorte of them 2d. a day.”[110] “Men that pull pease have
-8d. women 6d. a day.”[111]
-
-Footnote 110:
-
- Best, _Rural Economy_, p. 140.
-
-Footnote 111:
-
- _Ibid._ p. 142.
-
-A picture of hay-harvesting in the West of England given by Celia
-Fiennes suggests that in other parts of England to which she was
-accustomed, the labour, especially that of women, was not quite so
-heavy. All over Devon and Cornwall she says, hay is carried on the
-horses’ backs and the people “are forced to support it wᵗʰ their hands,
-so to a horse they have two people, and the women leads and supports
-them, as well as yᵉ men and goe through thick and thinn.... I wondred at
-their Labour in this kind, for the men and the women themselves toiled
-Like their horses.”[112]
-
-Footnote 112:
-
- Fiennes (Celia), _Through England on a Side-saddle_, p. 225.
-
-There was hardly any kind of agricultural work from which women were
-excluded. Everenden “payed 1s. 2d. to the wife of Geo. Baker for
-shearing 28 sheep.”[113] In Norfolk the wages for a “woman clipper of
-sheepe” were assessed at 6d. per day with meat and drink, 1s. without,
-while a man clipper was paid 7d. and 14d. It is noteworthy that only 4d.
-per day was allowed in the same assessment for the diet of “women and
-such impotent persons that weed corn and other such like Laborers” and
-2d. per day for their wages.[114] Pepys on his visit to Stonehenge “gave
-the shepherd-woman, for leading our horses, 4d.,”[115] while Foulis
-enters, “Jan. 25, 1699 to tonie to give ye women at restalrig for making
-good wailings of strae, 4s. (Scots money).”[116]
-
-Footnote 113:
-
- Suss. Arch. Coll. Vol. IV., p. 24. _Everendon Account Book._
-
-Footnote 114:
-
- Tingye (J. C.), _Eng. Hist. Rev._, Vol. XIII., pp. 525-6.
-
-Footnote 115:
-
- Pepys, Vol. V., p. 302. (11th June, 1668).
-
-Footnote 116:
-
- Foulis (Sir John) _Acct. Bk._, p. 246.
-
-But the wives of husbandmen were not confined to agricultural work as is
-shown by many payments entered to them in account books:[117] Thus the
-church wardens at Strood, in Kent, paid the widow Cable for washing the
-surplices 1s.[118]; and at Barnsley they gave “To Ricard Hodgaris wife
-for whipping dogs” (out of the Church) 2s.[119] while “Eustace Lowson of
-Salton (a carrier of lettres and a verie forward, wicked woman in that
-folly)” and Isabell her daughter are included in a Yorkshire list of
-recusants.[120]
-
-Footnote 117:
-
- “Aug. 7th., 1701 to my wife, to a Bleicher wife at bonaley for
- bleitching 1. 3. 4.” (Scots)
-
- “Jan. 28th, 1703 to my good douchter jennie to give tibbie tomsome for
- her attendance on my wife the time of her sickness 5.16.0 (Scots).
- (_Foulis (Sir John) Acct. Bk._ p. 295, 314.)
-
- “Sep. 11th, 1676, pd. her (Mary Taylor) more for bakeing four days.
- Mothers Acct. 8d. (_Fell, (Sarah) Household Accts._ p. 309.)
-
- “Pd. Widow Lewis for gathering herbs two daies 6d. (Sussex, Arch.
- Coll. xlviii. p. 120. _Extracts from the Household Account Book of
- Herstmonceux Castle._)
-
- “Paid to goodwife Stopinge for 2 bundles of Rushes at Whitsuntide for
- the Church, iiijid. (_Churchwarden’s Account Book, Strood_, p. 95,
- 1612.”
-
-Footnote 118:
-
- _Churchwarden’s Account Book, Strood_, p. 197. 1666.
-
-Footnote 119:
-
- Cox (J. C.) _Churchwarden’s Accts._, p. 309.
-
-Footnote 120:
-
- _Yorks. North Riding, Q.S. Rec._, Vol. I., p. 62, Jan. 8., 1606-7.
-
-No doubt the mother with young children brought them with her to the
-harvest field, where they played as safely through the long summer day
-as if they and she had been at home. But at other times she chose work
-which did not separate her from her children, spinning being her
-unfailing resource. It is difficult living in the age of machinery to
-imagine the labour which clothing a family by hand-spinning involved,
-though the hand-spun thread was durable and fashions did not change.
-
-In spite of the large demand the price paid was very low, but when not
-obliged to spin for sale, time was well spent in spinning for the
-family. The flax or hemp grown on the allotment, was stored up for
-shirts and house-linen. If the husbandman had no sheep, the children
-gathered scraps of wool from the brambles on the common, and thus the
-only money cost of the stuff worn by the husbandman’s household was the
-price paid to the weaver.
-
-The more prosperous the family, the less the mother went outside to
-work, but this did not mean, as under modern conditions, that her share
-in the productive life of the country was less. Her productive energy
-remained as great, but was directed into channels from which her family
-gained the whole profit. In her humble way she fed and clothed them,
-like the wise woman described by Solomon.
-
-The more she was obliged to work for wages, the poorer was her family.
-
-
- C. _Wage-earners._
-
-In some respects it is less difficult to visualise the lives of women in
-the wage-earning class than in the class of farmers and husbandmen. The
-narrowness of their circumstances and the fact that their destitution
-brought them continually under the notice of the magistrates at Quarter
-Sessions have preserved data in greater completeness from which to
-reconstruct the picture. Had this information been wanting such a
-reconstruction would have demanded no vivid imagination, because the
-results of the semi-starvation of mothers and small children are very
-similar whether it takes place in the seventeenth or the twentieth
-century; the circumstances of the wives of casual labourers and men who
-are out of work and “unemployable” in modern England may be taken as
-representing those of almost the whole wage-earning class in the
-seventeenth century.
-
-The most important factors governing the lives of wage-earning women
-admit of no dispute. First among these was their income, for
-wage-earners have already been defined as the class of persons depending
-wholly upon wages for the support of their families.
-
-Throughout the greater part of the seventeenth century the rate of wages
-was not left to be adjusted by the laws of supply and demand, but was
-regulated for each locality by the magistrates at Quarter Sessions.
-Assessments fixing the maximum rates were published annually and were
-supposed to vary according to the price of corn. Certainly they did vary
-from district to district according to the price of corn in that
-district, but they were not often changed from year to year.
-
-Prosecutions of persons for offering and receiving wages in excess of
-the maximum rates frequently occurred in the North Riding of Yorkshire,
-but it is extremely rare to find a presentment for this in other Quarter
-Sessions. The Assessments were generally accepted as publishing a rate
-that public opinion considered fair towards master and man, and outside
-Yorkshire steps were seldom taken to prevent masters from paying more to
-valued servants. That upon the whole the Assessments represent the rate
-ordinarily paid can be shown by a comparison with entries in
-contemporary account books.
-
-The Assessments deal largely with the wages of unmarried farm servants
-and with special wages for the seasons of harvest, intended for the
-occasional labour of husbandmen, but in addition there are generally
-rates quoted by the day for the common labourer in the summer and winter
-months. Even when meat and drink is supplied, the day-rates for these
-common labourers are higher than the wages paid to servants living in
-the house and are evidently intended for married men with families.
-
-In one Assessment different rates are expressly given for the married
-and unmarried who are doing the same work,[121] a married miller
-receiving with his meat and drink, 4d. a day which after deducting
-holidays would amount to £500 by the year, while the unmarried miller
-has only 46s. 8d. and a pair of boots.
-
-Footnote 121:
-
- A shoemaker servant of the best sorte being married, to have without
- meate and drinke for every dosin of shoes —— xxijid.
-
- ditto unmarried to have by the yeare with meat and drink and withowte
- a leverye —— liijs.
-
- Millers and drivers of horses beinge batchelors then with meate and
- drinke and without a liverye and a payre of boots —— xlvis viijid.
-
- Millers and drivers of horses beinge married men shall not take more
- by the daye then with meate and drinke —— ivid. and without viijid.
-
- a man servant of the best sorte shall not have more by the yeare then
- with a levereye —— xls. and without xlvjs viiid.
-
- the same, of the thirde sorte has only with a leverye xxvjs viiid. and
- without —— xxxiijs iiijd.
-
- while any sort of labourer, from the Annunciation of our Ladye until
- Michellmas has with meat and drink by the day —— ivd. and without
- viijd.
-
- From Michellmas to the Annunciation —— iiid. and without vijd.
-
- The best sorte of women servants shall not have more by the yeare than
- with a liverye —— xxjs. and without —— xxvjs viijd.
-
- while “a woman reaping of corne” shall not have “more by the daye then
- —— vd with meat and drink.”
-
- (_Hertfordshire Assessment_, 1591).
-
- Every man-servant serving with any person as a Comber of Wooll to have
- by the yeare —— 40s.
-
- Every such servant being a single man and working by yᵉ pound to have
- by yᵉ pound —— 1ᵈ.
-
- Every such servant being a marryed man and having served as an
- apprentice thereto according to the statute to have by yᵉ pound —— 2ᵈ.
-
- (_Assessment for Suffolk_, 1630).
-
-Assessments generally show a similar difference between the day wages of
-a common labourer and the wages of the best man-servant living in the
-house, and it may therefore be assumed that day labourers were generally
-married persons.
-
-Day rates were only quoted for women on seasonal jobs, such as harvest
-and weeding. It was not expected that married women would work all the
-year round for wages, and almost all single women were employed as
-servants.
-
-The average wage of the common agricultural labourer as assessed at
-Quarter Sessions was 3½d. per day in winter, and 4½d. per day in summer,
-in addition to his meat and drink. Actual wages paid confirm the truth
-of these figures, though it is not always clear whether the payments
-include meat and drink.[122]
-
-Footnote 122:
-
- Paid to a shovele man for 2 days to shovell in the cart rakes, 2s.
- (_Hertford Co. Rec._, Vol. I, p. 233, 1672.) 2½ days’ work of a
- labourer, 2s. 6d. (_ibid._, p. 130, 1659).
-
- For one daies work for one labourer, 1s. (_Strood Churchwarden’s Acc._
- p. 182, 1662.)
-
- pᵈ. to James Smith for one days’ work thatching about Widow Barber’s
- house, she being in great distress by reason she could not lie down in
- her bed and could get no help to do the same. 1s. 2d. (_Cratford
- Parish Papers_, p. 152, 1622.) Thatchers were paid more than ordinary
- labourers, being generally assessed at the same rate as a carpenter,
- or a mower in the harvest.
-
- _July 15, 1676._ Tho. Scott for workeinge hay 2 dayes, 4d.
-
- Tho. Greaves youngeʳ for workeinge hay 2 dayes, 4d.
-
- _May 5, 1678_, Will Braithwᵗ foʳ threshing 6 dayes 1.00.
-
- _April 27, 1676_, by mᵒ. pᵈ. him for thatching 2 days at Petties
- Tenemᵗ, 8d.
-
- _August 2, 1676._ pᵈ Margᵗ Dodgson foʳ workinge at hay & otheʳ worke 5
- weekes 03. 06.
-
- pᵈ Mary Ashbrner for workinge at hay & other worke 4 weekes & 3 dayes,
- 03. 0. 0.
-
- _Sept 4._ pᵈ. Will Nicholson wife foʳ weedinge in yᵉ garden & pullinge
- hempe 12 dayes 01. 0. 0.
-
- _Oct. 2._ pᵈ. Issa. Atkinson for her daughtʳ Swingleinge 6 dayes 01.
- 0. 0.
-
- _May 7, 1677._ pᵈ. Will Ashbrner for his daughteʳ harrowing here 2
- weekes 01. 0. 0. (_Fell (Sarah), House Acct._)
-
- Labourers’ wages 4d. per day.
-
- (_Hist. MSS. Comm. Var. Coll._, Vol. IV. 133, 1686. Sir Jno. Earl’s
- Inventory of goods.)
-
- Weeks’ work common labourer, 3s. Thos. West, 1 week’s haying 2s.
- (_Sussex Arch. Coll._, Vol. IV, p. 24, _Everendon Acc. Book_, 1618.)
-
- Paid for a labourer 3 dayes to hoult the alees and carrying away the
- weedes, 1s. 6d. (_Cromwell Family, Bills and Receipts_, Vol. II, p.
- 233, 1635.)
-
- _Jan. 26, 1649._ Payd. to John Wainwright for 5 days worke 1s. 8d.
- [Yorkshire].
-
- (_Eyre (Capt. Adam) Dyurnall_, p. 117.)
-
- Thos. Hutton, xiiij days work ijs. iiijd, his wyfe xij dayes iiijs.
- Thos. Hutton xiij dayes at hay vid, his wyfe 4 dayes xvjid. Leonell
- Bell, xiij dayes about hay, vjs. vjid.
-
- Tho. Bullman the lyke. iiijs. iiijd, Thos. Hutton 4 dayes at mowing
- corne, xvjid.
-
- _Howard Household Book_, p. 40-41).
-
-If we accept the Assessments as representing the actual wages earned by
-the ordinary labourer we can estimate with approximate accuracy the
-total income of a labourer’s family, for we have defined the wage-earner
-as a person who depended wholly upon wages and excluded from this class
-families who possessed gardens. Taking a figure considerably higher than
-the one at which the Assessment averages work out, namely 5d. per day
-instead of 4d. per day, to be the actual earnings of a labouring man in
-addition to his meat and drink, and doubling that figure for the three
-months which include the hay and corn harvests, his average weekly
-earnings will amount to 3s. 2d. Except in exceptional circumstances his
-wife’s earnings would not amount to more than 1s. a week and her meat
-and drink. The more young children there were, the less often could the
-wife work for wages, and when not doing so her food as well as the
-children’s must be paid for out of the family income.
-
-In a family with three small children it is unlikely that the mother’s
-earnings were more than what would balance days lost by the father for
-holidays or illness, and the cost of his food on Sundays, but allowing
-for a small margin we may assume that 3s. 6d. was the weekly income of a
-labourer’s family, and that this sum must provide rent and clothing for
-the whole family and food for the mother and children.
-
-A careful investigation of the cost of living is necessary before we can
-test whether this amount was adequate for the family’s maintenance.
-
-There is no reason to suppose that a diet inferior to present standards
-could maintain efficiency in the seventeenth century. On the contrary,
-the English race at that time attributed their alleged superiority over
-other nations to a higher standard of living.[123]
-
-Footnote 123:
-
- The dietary in charitable institutions gives an idea of what was
- considered bare necessity.
-
- (_Children’s Diet in Christ Church Hospital_, 1704.)
-
- For breakfast, Bread and Beer. For dinner, Sunday, Tuesday, and
- Thursday, boiled beef and pottage. Monday, milk pottage, Wednesday,
- furmity. Friday old pease & pottage. Saturday water gruel. For supper
- bread and cheese or butter for those that cannot eat cheese. Sunday
- supper, legs of mutton. Wednesday and Friday, pudding pies.
-
- (_Stow, London, Book_ I, p. 182.)
- _Diet for Workhouse, Bishopsgate Street, London._
-
- They have Breakfasts, dinners, and suppers every day in the week. For
- each meal 4 oz. bread, 1½ oz. cheese, 1 oz. butter, 1 pint of beer.
- Breakfast, four days, bread and cheese or butter and beer. Mondays a
- pint of Pease Pottage, with Bread and Beer. Tuesdays a Plumb Pudding
- Pye 9 oz. and beer. Wednesdays a pint of Furmity. On Friday a pint of
- Barley Broth and bread. On Saturdays, a plain Flower Sewet Dumpling
- with Beer. Their supper always the same, 4 oz. bread, 1½ of cheese or
- 1 oz. of butter, and beer sufficient. (Stow, _London_, Book I, p.
- 199).
-
- _Lady Grisell Baillie gives her servant’s diet_:
-
- Sunday they have boild beef and broth made in the great pot, and
- always the broth made to serve two days. Monday, broth made on Sunday,
- and a Herring. Tuesday, broth and beef. Wednesday, broth and two eggs
- each. Thursday, broth and beef. Friday, Broth and herring. Saturday,
- broth without meat, and cheese, or a pudden or blood-pudens, or a
- hagish, or what is most convenient. Breakfast and super, half an oat
- loaf or a proportion of broun bread, but better set down the loaf, and
- see non is taken or wasted, and a muchkin of beer or milk whenever
- there is any. At dinner a mutchkin of beer for each. _Baillie (Lady
- Grisell). Household Book_, pp. 277-8. 1743.
-
-A comparison between the purchasing power of money in the seventeenth
-and twentieth centuries is unsatisfactory for our purpose, because the
-relative values of goods have changed so enormously. Thus, though rent,
-furniture and clothes were much cheaper in the seventeenth century,
-there was less difference in the price of food. Sixpence per day is
-often given in Assessments as the cost of a labourer’s meat and drink
-and this is not much below the amount spent per head on these items in
-wage-earners’ families during the first decade of the twentieth century.
-
-One fact alone is almost sufficient to prove the inadequacy of a
-labourer’s wage for the maintenance of his family. His money wages
-seldom exceeded the estimated cost of his own meat and drink as supplied
-by the farmer, and yet these wages were to supply all the necessaries of
-life for his whole family. Some idea of the bare cost of living in a
-humble household may be gained by the rates fixed for pensions and by
-allowances made for Poor Relief. From these it appears that four
-shillings to five shillings a week was considered necessary for an
-adult’s maintenance.
-
-The Cromwell family paid four shillings weekly “to the widd. Bottom for
-her bord.”[124] Pensions for maimed soldiers and widows were fixed at
-four shillings per week “or else work to be provided which will make
-their income up to 4s. per week. Sick and wounded soldiers under cure
-for their wounds to have 4s. 8d. per week.”[125]
-
-Footnote 124:
-
- _Cromwell Family, Bills and Receipts_, Vol. II., p. 233, 1635.
-
-Footnote 125:
-
- _Acts and Ordinances of the Interregnum_, II., p. 556. (For Maimed
- Soldiers and Widows of Scotland and Ireland, Sept 30, 1651.)
-
-The Justices in the North Riding of Yorkshire drew up a scale of
-reasonable prices for billeted soldiers by which each trooper was to pay
-for his own meat for each night—6d; dragoon, 4½d; foot soldier, 4d.[126]
-
-Footnote 126:
-
- _Yorks. North Riding, Q.S. Rec._, Vol. VII., p. 106, 1690.
-
-“Edward Malin, blacksmith, now fourscore and three past and his wife
-fourscore, wanting a quarter” very poor and unable “to gett anything
-whereby to live,” complained to the Hertfordshire Quarter Sessions that
-they receive only 1s. 6d. a week between them; “others have eighteen
-pence apiece single persons” and desire that an order be made for them
-to have 3s. together which is but the allowance made to other
-persons.[127]
-
-Footnote 127:
-
- _Hertfordshire, Co. Rec._, Vol. I., p. 258, 1675.
-
-In cases of Poor Relief where payments were generally intended to be
-supplementary to other sources of income, the grants to widows towards
-the maintenance of their children were often absurdly small; in
-Yorkshire, Parish officers were ordered to “provide convenient
-habitation for a poor woman as they shall think fit and pay her 4d.
-weekly for the maintenance of herself and child.”[128] In another case
-to pay a very poor widow 6d. weekly for the maintenance of herself and
-her three children.[129] The allowance of 12d. weekly to a woman and her
-small children was reduced to 6d., “because the said woman is of able
-body, and other of her children are able to work.”[130] On the other
-hand when an orphan child was given to strangers to bring up, amounts
-varying from 1s. to 5s. per week were paid for its maintenance.[131]
-
-Footnote 128:
-
- _Yorks. N.R. Q.S. Rec._, Vol. VI., p. 242, 1675.
-
-Footnote 129:
-
- _Ibid._ p. 217, 1674.
-
-Footnote 130:
-
- _Ibid._ p. 260, 1674.
-
-Footnote 131:
-
- Joane Weekes ... “hadd a maide childe placed to her to bee kept &
- brought upp, the mother of which Childe was executed at the Assizes,
- six pounds per ann, proporconed toward the keepinge of the said childe
- ... besides she desireth some allowance extraordinary for bringinge
- the said Childe to bee fitt to gett her livinge.” (_Somerset, Q.S.
- Rec._, Vol. III, p. 28-9, 1647).
-
- In 1663 a woman who was committed to the Castle of Yorke for felony
- and afterwards executed, was while there delivered of a male child,
- which was left in the gaol, and as it was not known where the woman
- was last an inhabitant the child could not be sent to the place of her
- settlement, Sir Tho. Gower was desired by Justices of Assize to take a
- course for present maintenance of the child. He caused it to be put
- unto the wife of John Boswell to be nursed and provided for with other
- necessaries. John Boswell and his wife have maintained the child ever
- since and have hitherto received no manner of allowance for the same.
- Ordered that the several Ridings shall pay their proportions to the
- maintenance past and present, after the rate of £5 per annum. (_Yorks.
- N.R. Q.S. Rec._, Vol. VI, pp. 102-3, 1666.)
-
- Marmaduke Vye was only to have £4 a year for keeping the child born in
- the gaol of Ivelchester whose mother was hanged for cutting of purses.
- (_Somerset Q.S. Rec._, Vol. I, p. 101., 1613.)
-
- Item payd to the said widowe Elkyns for Dyett and keeping of a poore
- child leafte upon the chardge of the parish at 11d. the weecke from
- the 14th of August, 1599, till this secound of Sept., 1601, every
- Saturday, being two yeres and three weeckes, videlicet 107 weeckes in
- toto vˡⁱ vijs. (_Ch. Accs., St. Michael’s in Bedwendine, Worcester_,
- p. 147.)
-
- Itm pd. to Batrome’s wife of Linstead for keeping of Wright’s child 52
- weeks £3 0s. 8d. (Cratfield _Parish Papers_, p. 129, 1602.)
-
- Pd to Geo. Cole to take and bring up Eliz. Wright, the daughter of Ann
- Wright according to his bond, £4. 0s. 0d. More towards her apparell
- 5s. (_Ibid._ p. 137. 1609.)
-
- Item paide Chart’s Child’s keeping by the week £4. 11s. 8d. Item for
- apparrell £1. 18s. 2d. Item paid to the surgeon for her. 3s. 6d.
- (_Suss. Arch. Coll._, Vol. xx., p. 101, _Acct. Bk of Cowden_. 1627.)
- for apparrelling Wm. Uridge and for his keeping this yeare £5. 12s.
- 9d.
-
- (_Ibid._ p. 103, 1632.)
-
- For the keep of William Kemsing 14 weeks £1. 2s. 8d. and 23 weeks at
- 2s. per week, £2. 6s. 0d. and for apparrelling of him; and for his
- indentures; and for money given with him to put him out apprentice;
- and expended in placing him out £11. 17s. 9d.
-
- (_Ibid._ p. 107, 1650.)
-
- John Mercies wief for keeping Buckles child, weekly, 1s. 6d.
-
- John Albaes wief for keeping Partickes child, 1s. 4d.
-
- (_S.P.D._, cccxlvii., 67, 1. Feb, 1637. Answer of Churchwardens to
- Articles given by J.P.’s for St. Albans).
-
- George Arnold and Jas. Michell late overseers of the poore of the
- parishe of Othery ... had committed a poore child to the custody,
- keepinge and maintenance of ... Robert Harris promising him xijid.
- weekly. (_Somerset, Q.S. Rec._, Vol. III, p. 1, 1646.) Order for Thos.
- Scott, a poor, lame, impotent child, to be placed with Joanna Brandon;
- She to be paid 5s. a week for his maintenance. (_Middlesex Co. Rec._,
- p. 180, _Sess. Book_, 1698).
-
-Thus the amount paid by the Justices for maintaining one pauper child
-sometimes exceeded the total earnings of a labourer and his wife. Other
-pauper children were maintained in institutions. The girls at a
-particularly successful Industrial School in Bristol were given an
-excellent and abundant diet at a cost of 1s. 4d. per head per week.[132]
-At Stepney, the poor were maintained at 2s. 10d or 3s. per week,
-including all incidental expenses, firing and lodging. At Strood in
-Kent, 2s. was paid for children boarded out in poor families, while the
-inmates of the workhouse at Hanstope, Bucks, were supposed not to cost
-the parish more than 1s. 6d. a week per head.[133] At Reading it was
-agreed “that Clayton’s wief shall have xiiiiid. a weeke for every poore
-childe in the hospitall accomptinge each childe’s worke in parte of
-payment.”[134]
-
-Footnote 132:
-
- Cary, _Acc. Proceedings of the Corporation of Bristol_. 1700. “Their
- diets were made up of such provisions as were very wholesome, viz.
- Beef, Pease, Potatoes, Broath, Pease-porridge, Milk-porridge, Bread
- and Cheese, good Beer, Cabage, Carrots, Turnips, etc. it stood us
- (with soap to wash) in about sixteen pence per week for each of the
- one hundred girls.”
-
-Footnote 133:
-
- _Account Workhouses_, 1725, p. 13, p. 37, p. 79.
-
-Footnote 134:
-
- Guilding, _Reading_, Vol. II., p. 273, Jan. 16, 1625-6.
-
-These and many other similar figures show that a child must have cost
-from 1s. to 1s. 6d. a week for food alone, the amount varying according
-to age. Above seven years of age, children began to contribute towards
-their own support, but they were not completely self-supporting before
-the age of thirteen or fourteen.
-
-According to the wages assessments, a woman’s diet was reckoned at a
-lower figure than a man’s, but whenever they are engaged on heavy work
-such as reaping corn or shearing sheep, 6d. or 8d. a day is allowed for
-their “meate and drinke.” On other work, such as weeding or spinning,
-where only 2d. a day is reckoned for wages, their food also is only
-estimated as costing 2d. to 4d. As in such cases they are classed with
-“other impotent persons” it must not be supposed that 2d. or 3d.
-represents the cost of the food needed by a young active woman; it may
-even have been prolonged semi-starvation that had reduced the woman to
-the level of impotency. Unfortunately, there is often a wide difference
-between the cost of what a woman actually eats and what is necessary to
-maintain her in efficiency. Probably the woman who was doing ordinary
-work while pregnant or suckling a baby may have needed as much food as
-the woman who was reaping corn; but in the wage-earner’s family she
-certainly did not get it; thus when a writer[135] alleges that a man’s
-diet costs 5d. a day and a woman’s 1s. 6d per week, his statement may be
-correct as to fact, though the babies have perished for want of
-nourishment and the mother has been reduced to invalidism.
-
-Footnote 135:
-
- Dunning, R. _Plain and Easie Method_, p. 5, 1686.
-
-Another writer gives 2s. as being sufficient to “keep a poor man or
-woman (with good husbandry) one whole week.”[136] Certainly 2s. is the
-very lowest figure that can have sufficed to keep up the mother’s
-strength. The bare cost of food for a mother and three children must
-have amounted to at least 5s. 6d. per week, but there were other
-necessaries to be provided from the scanty wages. The poorest family
-required some clothes, and though these may have been given by
-charitable persons, rent remained to be paid. Building was cheap. In
-Scotland, the “new house” with windows glazed with “ches losens” only
-cost £4 12s. 3d. to build, while a “cothouse” built for Liddas “the
-merchant” cost only £1 0 0;[137] other cots were built for 4s., 11s.
-1d,, 5s. and 14s. 4d. These Scottish dwellings were mud hovels, but in
-England the labourers’ dwellings were not much better.
-
-Footnote 136:
-
- _Trade of England_, p. 10, 1681.
-
-Footnote 137:
-
- Baillie (Lady Grisel), _House Book_, Introd. Ixiv.
-
-Celia Fiennes describes the houses at the Land’s End as being “poor
-Cottages, Like Barns to Look on, much Like those in Scotland, but to doe
-my own country its right yᵉ Inside of their Little Cottages are Clean
-and plaister’d and such as you might Comfortably Eat and drink in, and
-for curiosity sake I dranck there and met with very good bottled
-ale.”[138]
-
-Footnote 138:
-
- Fiennes (Celia), _Through England on a Side-saddle_, p. 224.
-
-In some places the labourers made themselves habitations on the waste,
-but this was strictly against the law, such houses being only allowed
-for the impotent poor.
-
-Many fines are entered in Quarter Sessions Records for building houses
-without the necessary quantity of land. By 39 Eliz. churchwardens and
-overseers were ordered, for the relief of the impotent poor, to build
-convenient houses at the charges of the Parish, but only with the
-consent of the Lord of the Manor. 43 Eliz. added that such buildings
-were not at any time after to be used for other inhabitants but only for
-the impotent poor, placed there by churchwardens and overseers.
-
-The housing problem was so acute that many orders were made by the
-justices sanctioning or ordering the erection of these cottages. “Rob.
-Thompson of Brompton and Eliz. Thompson of Aymonderby widow, stand
-indicted for building a cottage in Aymonderby against the statute, etc.,
-upon a piece of ground, parcell of the Rectorie of Appleton-on-the
-street, and in which the said Eliz. doth dwell by the permission of John
-Heslerton, fermour of the said Rectorie, and that the same was so
-erected for the habitation of the said Elizᵗʰ. being a poore old woman
-and otherwise destitute of harbour and succour ... ordered that the said
-cottage shall continue ... for the space of twelve yeares, if the said
-Elizᵗʰ. live so long, or that the said Heslerton’s lease do so long
-endure.”[139] In another case, Nicholas Russell, the wife of Thomas
-Waterton, and Robert Arundell, were presented for erecting cottages upon
-the Lord’s waste ... at the suit of parishioners these cottages are
-allowed by Mr. Coningsby, lord of the manor.[140]
-
-Footnote 139:
-
- _Yorks. N.R. Q.S. Rec._, Vol. I., p. 29. 1605-6.
-
-Footnote 140:
-
- _Hertfordshire Co. Rec._, Vol. I., p. 63. 1639-41.
-
-It was often necessary to compel unwilling overseers to build cottages
-for the impotent poor, and for widows. “A woman with three children
-prays leave for the erection of a cottage in East Bedwyn, she having no
-habitation, but depending upon alms; from lying in the street she was
-conveyed into the church where she remained some small time, but was
-then ejected by the parish.” The overseers are ordered to provide for
-her.[141]
-
-Footnote 141:
-
- _Hist., MSS. Com. Var. Coll._, Vol. I, p. 113, _Wilts. Q.S. Rec._
- 1646.
-
-The overseers at Shipley were ordered to build a house on the waste
-there for Archelaus Braylsford, to contain “two chambers floored fit for
-lodgings” or in default 5s. a week. At the following sessions his house
-was further ordered to be “a convenient habitation 12 feet high upon the
-side walls soe as to make 2 convenient chambers.”[142]
-
-Footnote 142:
-
- Cox, _Derbyshire Annals_, Vol. II, p. 176, 1693.
-
- The following cases are representative of an immense number of
- petitions from widows and the impotent poor:
-
- 1608. Margaret Johns having dwelt in Naunton Beauchamp for 55 years
- has now no house or room but dwells in a barn, she desires to have
- house room and will not charge the parish so long as she is able to
- work.
-
- 1620. Eleanor Williams charged with keeping of young child is now
- unprovided with house room for herself and her poor child, her husband
- having left the soile where they lately dwelled and is gone to some
- place to her unknown. She is willing “to relieve her child by her
- painful labour but wanteth a place for abode” prays to be provided
- with house room.
-
- (Bund, J. W. Willis, _Worcestershire Co. Records_, Vol. I., pp. 116-7,
- 337).
-
- 1621. Overseers of Uggliebarbie to provide a suitable dwelling for 2
- women (sisters) if they refuse them a warrant, etc. (_Yorks. North
- Riding Q.S. Recs._, Vol. III., p. 118.)
-
- 1672. Parish Officers of Scruton to provide a convenient habitation
- for Mary Hutchinson and to set her on work, and provide for her, etc.,
- until she shall recover the possession of certain lands in Scruton.
- (_Ibid._ Vol. VI., p. 175).
-
- 1684. Mary Marchant ... livinge in good estimation And repute for many
- years together; being very Carefull to maintaine herself And family
- for being prejudice to ye sd. Towne; ye petitioners husbande beinge
- abroad and driven Away; and returninge not backe Againe to her
- leaveinge ye petitioner with a little girle; being In want was put
- into a little cottage by & with ye consent of ye sd. Towne; ye sd.
- Owner of ye sd. Tenement comeinge when ye petitioner was gon forth to
- worke leavinge her little girle in ye sd. house; ye sd. Owner get a
- locke And Key upp on ye door, where as your petitioner cannot Injoy
- her habitation wth peace and quietness; soe yt your petitioner is
- likely to starve for want of A habitation and child, etc.
-
- (Cox. J. C., _Derbyshire Annals_, Vol. II., pp. 175-6, _Q.S. Recs._,
- 1684).
-
-The housing problem however could not be settled by orders instructing
-the overseers to build cottages for the impotent poor alone. Petitions
-were received as often from able-bodied labourers and for them the law
-forbade the erection of a cottage without four acres of land attached.
-The magistrates had no power to compel the provision of the land and
-thus they were faced with the alternatives of breaking the law and
-sanctioning the erection of a landless cottage on the waste or else
-leaving the labourer’s family to lie under hedges. The following
-petitions illustrate the way in which this situation was faced:
-
-George Grinham, Norton-under-Hambton, “in ye behalfe of himselfe, his
-poore wife and famelye” begged for permission “for my building yᵉʳ, of a
-little poor house for ye comfort of my selfe, my poore wife and children
-betwixt those other 2 poore houses erected on the glebe ... being a
-towne borne childe yᵉʳ myselfe.”[143]
-
-Footnote 143:
-
- _Somerset, Q.S. Rec._, Vol. I., p. 41, 1609.
-
-Another from William Dench, “a very poor man and having a wife and seven
-children all born at Longdon,” who was destitute of any habitation,
-states that he was given by William Parsons of Longdon, yeoman, in
-charity, “a little sheep-cote which sheep cote petitioner, with the
-consent of the churchwardens and overseers converted to a dwelling.
-Afterwards he having no licence from Quarter Sessions, nor under the
-hands of the Lord of the Manor so to do, and the sheep-cote being on the
-yeoman’s freehold and not on the waste or common, contrary to Acts 43
-Eliz. c. 2 and 31 Eliz. c. 7 he was indicted upon the Statute against
-cottages and sued to an outlawry. He prays the benefit of the King’s
-pardon and for licence in open session for continuance of his
-habitation.”[144]
-
-Footnote 144:
-
- _Hist. MSS. Com. Var. Coll._, Vol. I., p. 296, _Worcestershire, Q.S.
- Rec._, 1617.
-
-Eliz. Shepperd of Windley alleged she “was in possession of a Certayne
-cottage situate in Chevin, which was pulled downe and taken away by the
-Inhabitants of Dooeffield, shee left without habitation and hath soe
-Continued Twelve months at the least, shee being borne in Windley, and
-hath two small children” prayed the inhabitants should find her a
-homestead—the case was adjourned because the overseers raised a
-technical objection; that Eliz. Shepherd was married, & a woman’s
-petition could only proceed from a spinster or widow—meanwhile another
-child was born, and at the Michaelmas Sessions a joint petition was
-presented by Ralph Shepherd and Eliz. his wife, with the result that
-“the overseers are to find him habitation or show cause.”[145]
-
-Footnote 145:
-
- Cox, J. C. _Derbyshire Annals_, Vol. II., pp. 173-4, 1649.
-
-Joseph Lange of Queene Camell “being an honest poore laborer and havinge
-a wife and 2 smale Children” prayed that he “might haue libertie to
-erect a Cottage uppon a wast ground”.... This was assented to “for the
-habitacon of himselfe for his wife and afterwards the same shall be
-converted to the use of such other poore people etc.”
-
-Order that Robert Morris of Overstowey, husbandman, a very poor man
-having a wife and children, and no place of habitation “soe that hee is
-like to fall into greate misery for want thereof” may erect and build
-him a cottage on some part of the “wast” of the manor of Overstowey ...
-(subject to the approbation of the Lord of the said Manor).[146]
-
-Footnote 146:
-
- _Somerset Q.S. Rec._, Vol. III., pp. 29, 58.
-
-The predicament of married labourers is shown again in the following
-report to the Hertfordshire Quarterly Sessions: “John Hawkins hath
-erected a cottage on the waste of my mannour of Benington, in
-consideration of the great charge of his wife and children that the said
-Hawkins is to provide for, I do hereby grant and give leave to him to
-continue the said cottage during his life and good behaviour.”[147]
-
-Footnote 147:
-
- _Hertford Co. Rec._, Vol. I., p. 100, 1652.
-
-Labourers naturally were unwilling to hire cottages while there was a
-possibility of inducing the justices to provide one on the waste rent
-free. The churchwardens of Great Wymondley forwarded a certificate
-stating “that the poor people of the said parish that are old and not
-able to work are all provided for and none of the poor people of the
-said parish have been driven to wander into other unions to beg or ask
-relief, for this thirty years last past. This Nathaniel Thrussel, which
-now complains, is a lusty young man, able to work and always brought up
-to husbandry, his wife, a young woman, always brought up to work, and
-know both how to perform their work they are hired to do, and have at
-present but one child, but did not care to pay rent for a hired house
-when he had one nor endeavour to hire a house for himself when he
-wants.”[148]
-
-Footnote 148:
-
- _Hertford Co. Rec._, Vol. I., p. 370, 1687.
-
-The scarcity of cottages resulted in extortionate rents for those that
-existed; Best noted that in his district “Mary Goodale and Richard
-Miller have a cottage betwixt them; Mary Goodale hath two roomes, and
-the orchard and payeth 6s. per annum; and Richard Miller, hayth one
-roomestead and payeth 4s. per annum.... They usually lette their
-cottages hereaboutes, for 10s. a piece, although they have not soe much
-as a yard, or any backe side belonging to them.”[149]
-
-Footnote 149:
-
- Best, _Rural Econ._, p. 125.
-
-The rents paid elsewhere are shown in the returns made in 1635 by the
-Justices of the Peace for the Hundreds of Blofield and Walsham in
-Norfolk concerning cottages and inmates:
-
-Thos. Waters hath 3 inmates:
-
- Wm. Wyley pays £1. per annum
- Anthony Smith pays £1. per annum
- Roger Goat pays 12s. per annum
-
-“which are all poore labourers and have wifes and severall children and
-if they be put out cannot be provided in this towne and by reason of
-their charge and poverty are not likely to be taken elsewhere.”
-
-“Wm. Browne hath 2 inmates:
-
- Edmund Pitt 14s. per annum
- Wm. Jostling 14s. per annum
-
-that are very poor and impotent and take colleccion.
-
-Wm. Reynoldes hath 2 inmates:
-
- Anthony Durrant £1 16s. per annum
- Wm. Yurely 16s. per annum
-
-both are very poore labourers and have wifes and small children. Jas.
-Candle owner of a cottage [has] Robert Fenn, 13s. a poore man. Anne
-Linckhorne 1 inmate Philip Blunt that pay £1. 17. 0 that is a poore man
-and hath wife and children.”[150]
-
-Footnote 150:
-
- _S.P.D._, cccx., 104, 1635. Returns made by Justices of the Peace.
-
-Thus it appears that while a labourer who obtained a cottage on the
-waste lived rent free, twenty or thirty shillings might be demanded from
-those who were less fortunate.
-
-Whatever money was extorted for rent meant so much less food for the
-mother and children, for it has been shown that the family income was
-insufficient for food alone, and left no margin for rent or clothes.
-
-The relation of wages to the cost of living is seldom alluded to by
-contemporary writers, but a pamphlet published in 1706 says of a
-labourer’s family, “a poor Man and his Wife may have 4 or 5 children, 2
-of them able to work, and 3 not able, and the Father and Mother not able
-to maintain themselves and Families in Meat, Drink, Cloaths and House
-Rent under 10s. a week.”[151]
-
-Footnote 151:
-
- Haynes, (John.), _Present State of Clothing_, p. 5, 1706.
-
-A similar statement is made by Sir Matthew Hale, who adds “and so much
-they might probably get if employed.”[152] But no evidence has been
-found from which we can imagine that an agricultural labourer’s family
-could possibly earn as much as 10s. a week in the seventeenth century.
-Our lower estimate is confirmed by a report made by the Justices of the
-Peace for the half hundred of Hitching concerning the poor in their
-district; “when they have worke the wages geven them is soe small that
-it hardlye sufficeth to buy the poore man and his familye breed, for
-they pay 6s. for one bushell of mycelyn grayne and receive but 8d. for
-their days work. It is not possible to procure mayntenance for all these
-poore people and their famylyes by almes nor yet by taxes.”[153]
-
-Footnote 152:
-
- Hale, (Sir Matt). _Discourse touching Provision for the Poor_, p. 6,
- 1683.
-
-Footnote 153:
-
- _S.P.D._ ccclxxxv., 43. Mar. 8, 1638.
-
-The insolvency of the wage-earning class is recognized by Gregory King
-in his calculations of the income and expense of the several Families of
-England, for the year 1680. All other classes, including artisans and
-handicrafts show a balance of income over expenditure but the families
-of seamen, labourers and soldiers show an actual yearly deficit.[154]
-
-Footnote 154:
-
- King (Gregory). _Nat. and Political Observations_, pp. 48-9.
-
- NO. OF FAMILIES. YEARLY
- INCOME PER EXPENSE LOSS PER
- PERSONS. HEAD. PER HEAD. HEAD.
-
- 50,000 Common Seamen 150,000 £7. £7. 10s. 10s.
-
- 364,000 Labouring 1,275,000 £4. 10s. £4. 12s. 2s.
- people &
- outservants
-
- 400,000 Cottagers & 1,300,000 £2. £2. 5s. 5s.
- Paupers
-
- 35,000 Common 70,000 £7. £7. 10s. 10s.
- soldiers
-
-A still more convincing proof of the universal destitution of
-wage-earners is shown in the efforts made by churchwardens and overseers
-in every county throughout England to prevent the settlement within the
-borders of their parish of families which depended solely on wages.
-
-Their objection is not based generally upon the ground that the labourer
-or his wife were infirm, or idle, or vicious; they merely state that the
-family is likely to become chargeable to the parish. Each parish was
-responsible for the maintenance of its own poor, and thus though farmers
-might be needing more labourers, the parish would not tolerate the
-settlement of families which could not be self-supporting.
-
-The disputes which arose concerning these settlements contain many
-pitiful stories.
-
-“Anthony addams” tells the justices that he was born in Stockton and
-bred up in the same Parish, most of his time in service and has “taken
-great pains for my living all my time since I was able and of late I
-fortuned to marry with an honest young woman, and my parishioners not
-willing I should bring her in the parish, saying we should breed a
-charge amongst them. Then I took a house in Bewdley and there my wife
-doth yet dwell and I myself do work in Stockton ... and send or bring my
-wife the best relief I am able, and now the parish of Bewdley will not
-suffer her to dwell there for doubt of further charge.... I most humbly
-crave your good aid and help in this my distress or else my poor wife
-and child are like to perish without the doors: ... that by your good
-help and order to the parish of Stockton I may have a house there to
-bring my wife & child unto that may help them the best I can.”[155]
-
-Footnote 155:
-
- _Hist. MSS. Com. Var. Coll._, Vol. I., p. 298, _Worcestershire Q.S.
- Rec._, 1618.
-
-Another petition was brought by Josias Stone of Kilmington ... “shewinge
-that he hath binn an Inhabitant and yet is in Kilmington aforesaid and
-hath there continued to and fro these five yeares past and hath donn
-service for the said parishe and hath lately married a wife in the said
-parish intendinge there to liue and reside yet since his marriage is by
-the said parishe debarred of any abidinge for him and his said wife
-there in any howse or lodginge for his mony.”[156]
-
-Footnote 156:
-
- _Somerset, Q.S. Rec._, Vol. III., p. 15, 1647.
-
-Another dispute occurred over the case of Zachary Wannell and his wife
-who came lately from Wilton “into the towne of Taunton where they haue
-been denyed a residence and they ly upp and downe in barnes and hay
-lofts, the said Wannell’s wife being great with child; the said Wannell
-and his wife to be forthwith set to Wilton and there to continue until
-the next General Sessions. The being of the said Wannell and his wife at
-Wilton not to be interpreted as a settlement of them there.”[157]
-
-Footnote 157:
-
- _Somerset Q.S. Rec._, Vol. III., p. 246, 1654.
-
-There were endless examples of these conflicts often attended as in the
-above case with great cruelty.[158]
-
-Footnote 158:
-
- “One Humfrey Naysh, a poore man hath ben remayning and dwellinge
- within the pish of Newton St. Lowe by the space of five years or
- thereabouts and now being maryed and like to haue charge of children,
- the pishioners Do endeuor to put the said Naishe out of their pish by
- setting of amcents and paynes in their Courts on such as shall give
- him house-roome, or suffer him to liue in their houses which he doth
- or offereth to rent for his money which the court conceiveth to be
- vnjust and not accordinge to lawe.” Overseers ordered to provide him a
- house for his money. (_Ibid._, Vol. II, p. 19, 1626.)
-
- The petition of the “overseer of the poore of the parishe of East
- Quantoxhead ... that one Richard Kamplyn late of Kilve with his wife
- and three small children are late come as Inmates into the Parish of
- East Quantoxhead which may hereafter become very burdensome and
- chargeable to the said parish if tymley prevention bee not taken
- therein.” (_Ibid._, Vol. III, p. 9, 1646.)
-
- “John Tankens, his wife and three children ... had lived twoe yeares
- in Chewstoake undisturbed and from thence came to Chew Magna and there
- took part of a Cottage for their habitation for one yeare ... whereof
- the parishe of Chew Magna taking notice found themselves aggrieved
- thereatt, and brought the same in question both before the next
- Justice of the peace of Chew Magna and att the Leete or Lawday, and
- yett neither the said Tankens, his wife or children, had beene
- actually chardgeable to the said parishe of Chew Magna. This Court in
- that respect thinketh not fitt to disturbe the said Tankens, his wife
- or children duringe the said terme, but doth leave them to thend of
- the same terme to bee settled accordinge by lawe they ought. And
- because the parishioners of Chew Magna haue been for the most parte of
- the tyme since the said Tankens, his wife and Children came to Chew
- Magna complayninge against them, This court doth declare that the
- beinge of them att Chew Magna aforesaid duringe the said terme shall
- not bee interpreted to bee a settlement there.” (_Ibid._, Vol. III,
- pp. 94-5, 1649).
-
- “Pet. of Richard Cookesley of Ashbrettle shewing that he is married in
- the said parish and the said parish endeavour to haue him removed from
- thence although hee is no way chargeable, this court doth see noe
- cause but that the said Cookesley may remaine att Ashbrittle
- aforesaid; provided that his being there shall not be interpretted to
- bee a settlement of him there.” (_Ibid._, Vol. III., p. 248, 1654).
-
- James Hurde a poor labourer stated that for these two years last past
- he had dwelt in the parish of Westernemore “In a house wch he hired
- for his monie” and had taken great pains to maintain himself, his wife
- and two children, wherewith he never yet charged the said parish nor
- hopeth ever to do. And yet the parishioners and churchwardens there,
- do “indeavour” and threaten to turn him out of the parish unless he
- will put in sufficient sureties not to charge the said parish which he
- cannot by reason he is but a poor labourer; he humbly requests that he
- may quietly inhabit in the said parish so long as he doth not charge
- the same, otherwise he and his family are like to perish. (_Ibid._,
- Vol. I, p. 94, 1612.)
-
-The Justices were shocked at the consequent demoralization and generally
-supported the demands of the labourers as regards their settlement and
-housing. One writes to the clerk of the Peace: “I have sent you enclosed
-the recognizance of William Worster and William Smith, of Bovindon, for
-contempt of an order of sessions ... in the behalfe of one, John Yorke,
-formerly a vagrant, but now parishionir of Bovingdon. Yet I believe the
-rest of the inhabitants will doe their utmost to gett him thence though
-they force him to turn vagrant againe. Yorke will be with you to prove
-that he was in the parish halfe-a-year or more before they gave him any
-disturbance, and that not privately, for he worked for severall
-substantiall men and was at church, and paid rent.”[159]
-
-Footnote 159:
-
- _Hertford Co. Rec._, Vol. I., p. 321, 1681. Letter from Francis Leigh
- to Clerk of Peace.
-
-But the Justices never suspected that the rate of wages which they
-themselves had fixed below subsistence level was at the root of the
-settlement difficulty. The overseers believed that all the troubles
-might be solved if only young people would not marry imprudently, and
-they petitioned the Justices begging that overseers of parishes might
-not be compelled to provide houses for such young persons “as will marry
-before they have provided themselves with a settling.”[160]
-
-Footnote 160:
-
- _Hist. MSS. Com. Var. Coll._, Vol. I., p. 322. _Worcestershire Q.S.
- Rec._, 1661.
-
-While the overseers were seeking to exclude all wage earners from the
-parish, individual farmers, perchance the overseers themselves wanted
-more labourers. To meet this difficulty, the overseers discovered an
-ingenious device. Before granting a settlement, they required the
-labourer to find sureties to save the parish harmless from his becoming
-chargeable to it. Obviously a labourer could not himself find sureties,
-but the farmer who wished to employ him was in a position to do so, and
-thus the responsibility for the wage-earner’s family would be laid upon
-the person who profited by his services. Petitions against this demand
-for sureties came before the Quarter Sessions. One from Robert Vawter
-stated that he was “a poore Day labourer about a quarter of a yere
-sithence came into the said parish of Clutton, and there marryed with a
-poore Almesmans Daughter, now liveing with her said father in the
-Almeshouse of Clutton aforesaid, and would there settle himselfe with
-his said wife.” He was ordered to find sureties or to go to gaol.[161]
-
-Footnote 161:
-
- _Somerset Q.S. Rec._, Vol. II., p. 292, 1637-8.
-
-It was reported at Salford “Whereas Rich. Hudson is come lately into the
-towne with his wife and ffoure children to Remaine that the Burrow-reeve
-and Constables of this towne shall give notice unto Henry Wrigley, Esq.,
-upon whose land he still remaynes that hee remove him and his wife and
-children out of this Towne within this moneth unlesse hee give
-sufficient security upon the paine of ffive pounds.”[162]
-
-Footnote 162:
-
- _Salford Portmote Records_, Vol. II., p. 144, 1655.
-
-Similar orders were made re Nathan Cauliffe, his wife and three
-children, Robert Billingham with wife and two children, Peter ffarrant
-and his wife, & Roger Marland and wife. Later the record continues, “and
-yet the said parties are not removed” order was therefore made “that
-this order shalbee put in execution.”[163] Another step in the
-proceedings is recorded in the entry, “Whereas James Moores, George
-Moores and Adam Warmeingham stand bound unto Henry Wrigling Esq. in £20
-for the secureinge the Towne from any poverty or disability which should
-or might befall unto the said James, his wife, children, or family or
-any of them. And whereas it appeares that the said James Moores hath
-been Chargeable whereby the said bond is become forfeit yet this Jury
-doth give the said George Moores and Adam Warmeingham this libtie that
-the said James shall remove out of this towne before the next Court
-Leet.”[164]
-
-Footnote 163:
-
- _Ibid._, p. 151, 1656.
-
-Footnote 164:
-
- _Salford Portmote Rec._, Vol. II., p. 150.
-
-Fines were exacted from those who harboured unfortunate strangers
-without having first given security for them, and no exception was made
-on the score of relationship. James Meeke of Myddleton was presented
-“for keeping of his daughter Ellen Meeke, having a husband dwelling in
-another place, and having two children borne forth of the parishe.”[165]
-
-Footnote 165:
-
- _Yorks. N.R. Q.S. Rec._, Vol. I., p. 170, 1609.
-
-Rules made at Steeple Ashton by the Churchwardens declare: “There hath
-much povertie happened unto this p’ish by receiving of strangers to
-inhabit there and not first securing them ag’st such contingencies and
-avoyding the like occasions in tyme to come, It is ordered by this
-vestrie that ev’ry p’son or p’sons whatsoev’r w’ch shall lett or sett
-any houseinge or dwellinge to any stranger and shall not first give good
-securite for defending and saving harmeless the said inhabitants from
-the future charge as may happen by such stranger comeing to inhabite
-w’thin the said p’ish and if any p’son shall doe to the contrary Its
-agreed that such p’son soe receiving such stranger shal be rated to the
-poor to 20s. monethlie over and above his monethlie tax.”[166]
-
-Footnote 166:
-
- _Wilts. Notes and Queries_, Vol. VII., p. 281, 1664. _Churchwarden’s
- Acct. Book. Steeple Ashton._
-
-The penalties at Reading were higher. “At this daye Wm. Porter, th’elder
-was questioned for harboringe a straunger woman, and a childe, vizᵗ, the
-wief of John Taplyn; he worketh at Mr. Ed. Blagrave’s in Early:
-Confesseth. The woman saith she hath byn there ever syns Michaellmas
-last, and payed rent to goodman Porter, xxs a yeare; her kinsman
-Faringdon did take the house for them. Wm. Porter was required to paye
-xs a weeke accordinge to the orders and was willed to ridd his tenant
-with all speed upon payne of xs a weeke and to provide suretyes to
-discharge the towne of the childe.”[167]
-
-Footnote 167:
-
- Guilding, _Reading Records_, Vol. II., p. 181, 1624.
-
-The starvation and misery described in Quarter Sessions Records were not
-exceptional calamities, but represent the ordinary life of women in the
-wage earning class. The lives of men were drab and monotonous, lacking
-pleasure and consumed by unending toil, but they did not often suffer
-hunger. The labourer while employed was well fed, for the farmer did not
-grudge him food, though he did not wish to feed his family. There was
-seldom want of employment for agricultural labourers, and when their
-homes sank into depths of wretchedness and the wife’s attractiveness was
-lost through slow starvation, the men could depart and begin life anew
-elsewhere.
-
-The full misery of the labourer’s lot was only felt by the women; if
-unencumbered they could have returned, like the men, to the comfortable
-conditions of service, but the cases of mothers who deserted their
-children are rare.
-
-The hardships suffered by the women of the wage-earning class proved
-fatal to their children. Gregory King estimated that there were on an
-average only 3½ persons, including father and mother in a labourer’s
-family though he gives 4.8 as the average number of children for each
-family in villages and hamlets.[168] Another writer gives 3 persons as
-the average number for a labourer’s family.[169] The cases of disputed
-settlements which are brought before Quarter Sessions confirm the
-substantial truth of these estimates. It is remarkable that where the
-father is living seldom more than two or three children are mentioned,
-often only one, though in cases of widows where the poverty is recent
-and caused as it were by the accidental effect of the husband’s
-premature death, there are often five to ten children. In Nottingham, of
-seventeen families, who had recently come to the town and been taken in
-as tenants, and which the Council wanted to eject for fear of
-overcrowding, only one had four children, one three, and the rest only
-two or one child apiece.[170]
-
-Footnote 168:
-
- King (Gregory), _Natural and Political Observations and Conclusions_,
- p. 44, pp. 48-9.
-
-Footnote 169:
-
- _Grasier’s Complaint_, p. 60.
-
-Footnote 170:
-
- _Nottingham, Records of the Borough of_, Vol. IV., pp. 312-5, 1613.
-
-In fact, however large the birth-rate may have been, and this we have no
-means of ascertaining, few children in the wage-earning class were
-reared. Of those who reached maturity, many were crippled in mind or
-body, forming a large class of unemployables destined to be a burthen
-instead of strength to the community.
-
-This appalling loss and suffering was not due to the excessive work of
-married women but to their under-feeding and bad housing. Probably the
-women of the wage-earning class actually accomplished less work than the
-women of the husbandman class; but the latter worked under better
-conditions and were well nourished, with the result that their sons and
-daughters have been the backbone of the English nation.
-
-The sacrifice of the wage-earners’ children was caused by the mother’s
-starvation; vainly she gave her own food to the children for then she
-was unable to suckle the baby and grew too feeble for her former work.
-Probably she had herself been the daughter of a husbandman and was
-inured to labour from child hood. “Sent abroad into service and hardship
-when but 10 years old” as Oliver Heywood wrote of a faithful servant,
-she met the chances which decide a servant’s life. The work on farms was
-rough, but generally healthy. At first the child herded the pigs or the
-geese and followed the harrow and as she grew older the poultry yard and
-the cows divided her attention with the housework. Sometimes she was
-brutally treated and often received little training in her work, but
-generosity in meat and drink has always been characteristic of the
-English farmer, and during the hungry years of adolescence the average
-girl who was a servant in husbandry was amply nourished. Then came
-marriage. The more provident waited long in the hope of securing
-independence, and one of those desirable cottages with four acres of
-land, but to some the prospect seemed endless and at last they married
-hoping something would turn up; or perhaps they were carried away by
-natural impulses and married young without any thought for the future.
-Such folly was the despair of Churchwardens and Overseers, yet the folly
-need not seem so surprising when we consider that delay brought the
-young people no assurance of improvement in their position. Church and
-State alike taught that it was the duty of men and women to marry and
-bring forth children, and if for a large class the organisation of
-Society made it impossible for them to rear their children, who is to
-blame for the fate of those children, their parents or the community?
-
-After one of these imprudent marriages the husband sometimes continued
-to work on a farm as a servant, visiting his wife and children on
-Sundays and holidays. By this means he, at least, was well fed and well
-housed. The woman with a baby to care for and feed, could not leave her
-home every day to work and must share the children’s food. In
-consequence she soon began to practise starvation. Her settlement was
-disputed, and therefore her dwelling was precarious. Nominally she was
-transferred on marriage to the parish where her husband was bound as
-servant for the term of one year, but the parish objected to the
-settlement of a married man lest his children became a burden on them.
-
-No one doubted that it was somebody’s duty to care for the poor, but
-arrangements for relief were strictly parochial and the fear of
-incurring unlimited future responsibilities led English parishioners to
-strange lengths of cruelty and callousness. The fact that a woman was
-soon to have a baby, instead of appealing to their chivalry, seemed to
-them the best reason for turning her out of her house and driving her
-from the village, even when a hedge was her only refuge.
-
-The once lusty young woman who had formerly done a hard day’s work with
-the men at harvesting was broken by this life. It is said of an army
-that it fights upon its stomach. These women faced the grim battle of
-life, laden with the heavy burden of child-bearing, seldom knowing what
-it meant to have enough to eat. Is it surprising that courage often
-failed and they sank into the spiritless, dismal ranks of miserable
-beings met in the pages of Quarter Sessions Records, who are constantly
-being forwarded from one parish to another.
-
-Such women, enfeebled in mind and body, could not hope to earn more than
-the twopence a day and their food which is assessed as the maximum rate
-for women workers in the hay harvest. On the contrary, judging from the
-account books of the period, they often received only one penny a day
-for their labour. Significant of their feebleness is the Norfolk
-assessment which reads, “Women and such impotent persons that weed
-corne, or other such like Labourers 2d with meate and drinke, 6d
-without.”[171] Such wages may have sufficed for the infirm and old, but
-they meant starvation for the woman with a young family depending on her
-for food. And what chance of health and virtue existed for the children
-of these enfeebled starving women?
-
-Footnote 171:
-
- _Eng. Hist. Rev._, Vol. xiii., p. 522.
-
-On the death or desertion of her husband the labouring woman became
-wholly dependent on the Parish for support. The conduct of the
-magistrates in fixing maximum wages at a rate which they knew to be
-below subsistence level seems inexplicable; is in fact inexplicable
-until it is understood that these wages were never intended to be
-sufficient for the support of a family. Statute 31 Eliz. and others,
-show that the whole influence of the Government and administration was
-directed to prevent the creation of a class of wage-earners. It was an
-essential feature of Tudor policy to foster the Yeomanry, from whose
-ranks were recruited the defenders of the realm. Husbandmen were
-recognised as “the body and stay” of the kingdom.[172] They made the
-best infantry when bred “not in a servile or indigent fashion, but in
-some free and plentiful manner.”[173] If the depopulation of the
-country-side went on unchecked, there would come to pass “a mere
-sollitude and vtter desolation to the whole Realme, furnished only with
-shepe and shepherdes instead of good men; wheareby it might be a prey to
-oure enymies that first would sett vppon it.”[174]
-
-Footnote 172:
-
- Lipson, _Economic Hist. of England_, p. 153.
-
-Footnote 173:
-
- Bacon, _Works_, Vol. VI., p. 95.
-
-Footnote 174:
-
- Lamond (Eliz.) _Discourse of the Common weal_, 1581.
-
-Probably the consideration of whether a family could be fed by a
-labourer’s wage, seldom entered the Justices’ heads. They wished the
-family to win its food from a croft and regarded the wages as merely
-supplementary. The Justices would like to have exterminated
-wage-earners, who were an undesirable class in the community, and they
-might have succeeded as the conditions imposed upon the women made the
-rearing of children almost impossible, had not economic forces
-constantly recruited the ranks of wage-earners from the class above
-them.
-
-The demands of capital however for labour already exceeded the supply
-available from the ranks of husbandmen, and could only be met by the
-establishment of a class of persons depending wholly on wages. The
-strangest feature of the situation was the fact that the magistrates who
-were trying to exterminate wage-earners were often themselves
-capitalists creating the demand.
-
-The actual proportion of wage-earners in the seventeenth century can
-only be guessed at. The statement of a contemporary[175] that Labourers
-and Cottagers numbered 2,000,000 persons, out of a population of only
-5,000,000 must be regarded as an exaggeration; in any case their
-distribution was uneven.
-
-Footnote 175:
-
- _Grasier’s Complaint_, p. 60.
-
-Complaints are not infrequently brought before Quarter Sessions from
-parishes which say they are burdened with so great a charge of poor that
-they cannot support it; to other parishes the Justices are sometimes
-driven to issue orders on the lines of a warrant commanding “the
-Churchwardens of the townes of Screwton and Aynderby to be more diligent
-in relieving their poore, that the court be not troubled with any
-further claymours therein.”[176]
-
-Footnote 176:
-
- _Yorks. N.R. Q.S. Rec._, Vol. I., p. 22-3, 1605.
-
-On the other hand there were many districts where the wage-earner was
-hardly known and the authorities, like the Tithing men of Fisherton
-Delamere could report that they “have (thanks to the Almighty God
-theirfor) no popish recusants; no occasion to levy twelvepence, for none
-for bear to repair to divine service; no inns or alehouses licensed or
-unlicensed, no drunken person, no unlawful weights or measures, no
-neglect of hues and cries, no roads out of repair, no wandering rogues
-or idle persons, and no inmates of whom they desire information.”[177]
-Or the Constable of Tredington who declared that “the poor are weekly
-relieved, felons none known. Recusants one Bridget Lyne, the wife of
-Thos. Lyne. Tobacco none planted. Vagrants Mary How, an Irish woman and
-her sister were taken and punished according to the Statute and sent
-away by pass with a guide towards Ireland in the County of Cork.”[178]
-or as in another report “We have no bakers or alehouses within our
-parish. We cannot find by our searches at night or other time that any
-rogues or vagabonds are harboured saving Mr. Edward Hall who lodged a
-poor woman and her daughter. We do not suffer any vagrants which we see
-begging in our parish but we give them punishment according as we
-ought.”[179]
-
-Footnote 177:
-
- _Hist. MSS. Com. Var. Coll._, Vol. I., p. 93. _Wilts Q.S. Rec._, 1621.
- A similar detailed return was made from the Hundred of Wilton in 1691.
- Many often return ‘omnia bene’ and the like in brief.
-
-Footnote 178:
-
- Bund (J. W. Willis) _Worcestershire Co. Rec._, Vol. I., p. 564, 1634.
-
-Footnote 179:
-
- _Ibid._ Vol. I., p. 571, 1634.
-
-A review of the whole position of women in Agriculture at this time,
-shows the existence of Family Industry at its best, and of Capitalism at
-its worst. The smaller farmers and more prosperous husbandmen led a life
-of industry and independence in which every capacity of the women,
-mental, moral and physical had scope for development and in which they
-could secure the most favourable conditions for their children—while
-among capitalistic farmers a tendency can already be perceived for the
-women to withdraw from the management of business and devote themselves
-to pleasure. At the other end of the scale Capitalism fed the man whom
-it needed for the production of wealth but made no provision for his
-children; and the married woman, handicapped by her family ties, when
-she lost the economic position which enabled her through Family Industry
-to support herself and her children, became virtually a pauper.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IV
-
- TEXTILES.
-
- (A) _Introductory._ Historical importance in women’s economic
- development—Predominance of women’s labour—Significance in
- development of Industrialism—Low wages.
-
- (B) _Woollen Trade._ Historical importance—Proportions of men
- and women employed—Early experiments in factory system
- abandoned—Declining employment of women in management and
- control—Women Weavers—Burling—Spinning—Organization of spinning
- industry—Women who bought wool and sold yarn made more profit
- than those who worked for wages—Methods of spinning—Class of
- women who span for wages—Rates of wages—Disputes between
- spinsters and employers—Demoralisation of seasons of
- depression—Association of men and women in trade disputes.
-
- (C) _Linen._ Chiefly a domestic industry—Introduction of
- Capitalism—Increased demand caused by printing
- linens—Attempt to establish a company—Part taken by
- women—weaving—bleaching—spinning—Wages below subsistence
- level—Encouragement of spinning by local authorities to
- lessen poor relief—Firmin.
-
- (D) _Silk._ _Gold and Silver._ Silk formerly a monopoly of
- gentlewomen—In seventeenth century virtually one of the pauper
- trades. Gold and Silver furnished employment to the poorest
- class of women—Factory system already in use.
-
- (E) _Conclusion._
-
-
-FROM the general economic standpoint, the textile industries rank second
-in importance to agriculture during the seventeenth century, but in the
-history of women’s economic development they hold a position which is
-quite unique. If the food supply of the country depended largely on the
-work of women in agriculture, their labour was absolutely indispensable
-to the textile industries, for in all ages and in all countries spinning
-has been a monopoly of women. This monopoly is so nearly universal that
-we may suspect some physiological inability on the part of men to spin a
-fine even thread at the requisite speed, and spinning forms the greater
-part of the labour in the production of hand-made textile fabrics.
-
-It requires some effort of the imagination in this mechanical age to
-realize the incessant industry which the duty of clothing her own family
-imposed on every woman, to say nothing of the yarn required for the
-famous Woollen Trade. The service rendered by women in spinning for the
-community was compared by contemporaries to the service rendered by the
-men who ploughed. “Like men that would lay no hand to the plough, and
-women that would set no hand to the wheele, deserving the censure of
-wise Solomon, Hee that would not labour should not eat.”[180]
-
-Footnote 180:
-
- _Declaration of the Estate of Clothing_, p. 2, 1613.
-
-Textile industries fall into three groups: Woollen, Linen, and
-Miscellaneous, comprising silk, etc. Cotton is seldom mentioned although
-imported at this time in small quantities for mixture with linen.
-
-The predominance of women’s labour in the textile trades makes their
-history specially significant in tracing the evolution of women’s
-industrial position under the influences of capitalism; for the woollen
-trade was one of the first fields in which capitalistic organization
-achieved conspicuous success.
-
-The importance of the woollen trade as a source of revenue to the Crown
-drew to it so much attention that many details have been preserved
-concerning its development; showing with a greater distinctness than in
-other and more obscure trades, the steps by which Capitalistic
-Organization ousted Family Industry and the Domestic Arts. It is surely
-not altogether accidental that Industrialism developed so remarkably in
-two trades where the labour of women predominated—in the woollen trade
-which in the seventeenth century was already organized on capitalistic
-lines, and, one hundred years later, in the cotton trade.
-
-Some characteristic features of modern Industrialism were absent from
-the woollen trade in the seventeenth century. The work of men and women
-alike was carried on chiefly at home, and thus the employment of married
-women and children was unimpeded; nor are there any signs of industrial
-jealousy between men and women, who on the contrary, stand by each other
-during this period in all trade disputes. Nevertheless, the position of
-the woman wage-earner in the textile trades was extraordinarily bad, and
-this in spite of the fact that the demand for her labour appears nearly
-always to have exceeded the supply. The evidence contained in the
-following chapter shows that the wages paid to women in the seventeenth
-century for spinning linen were insufficient, and those paid for
-spinning wool, barely sufficient, for their individual maintenance, and
-yet out of them women were expected to support, or partly support, their
-children.
-
-Possibly the persistence of such low wages throughout the country was
-due in a measure to the convenience of spinning as a tertiary occupation
-for married women. She who was employed by day in the intervals of
-household duties with her husband’s business or her dairy and garden,
-could spin through the long winter evenings when the light was too bad
-for other work. The mechanical character of the movements, and the small
-demand they make on eye or thought, renders spinning wonderfully adapted
-to women whose serious attention is engrossed by the care or training of
-their children. A comparison of spinster’s wages with those of
-agricultural labourers, which were also below subsistence level, will
-show however that such an explanation does not altogether meet the case.
-
-The fact is that far from underselling the spinsters[181] who were
-wholly dependent on wages for their living, it seems probable that the
-women who only span for sale after the needs of their own households had
-been supplied, received the highest rates of pay, just as the
-husbandman, who only worked occasionally for wages, was paid better than
-the labourer who worked for them all the year round, and whose family
-depended exclusively on him. Disorganization and lack of bargaining
-power, coupled with traditions founded upon an earlier social
-organization, were responsible for the low wages of the spinsters. The
-agricultural labourer was crippled in his individual efforts for a
-decent wage because society persisted in regarding him as a household
-servant. The spinster was handicapped because in a society which began
-to assert the individual’s right to freedom, she had from her infancy
-been trained to subjection.
-
-Footnote 181:
-
- Spinster in the seventeenth century is used in its technical sense and
- refers equally to women who are married, unmarried or widows.
-
-It must however be remembered that though a large part of the ensuing
-chapter is concerned with spinsters and their wages, much, perhaps most,
-of the thread spun never came into the market, but was produced for
-domestic consumption. Thus we find all three forms of industrial
-organisation existing simultaneously in these trades—Domestic Industry,
-Family Industry, and Capitalistic Industry.
-
-Domestic Industry lingered especially in the Linen Trade until machinery
-made the spinning wheel obsolete, and Family Industry was still
-extensively practised in the seventeenth century; but Capitalistic
-Industry, already established in the Woollen Trade, was making rapid
-inroads on the other branches of the Textile Trades.
-
-Although Capitalism undermined the position of considerable economic
-independence enjoyed by married women and widows in the tradesman and
-farming classes, possibly its introduction may have improved the
-position of unmarried women, and others who were already dependent on
-wages; but such improvements belong to a later date. Their only
-indication in the seventeenth century is the clearly proved fact that
-wages for spinning were higher in the more thoroughly capitalistic
-woollen trade, than in the linen trade. Further evidence is a suggestion
-by Defoe that wages for spinning in the woollen trade were doubled, or
-even trebled, in the first decade of the eighteenth century, but no sign
-of this advance can be detected in our period.
-
-
- B. _Woollen Trade._
-
-The interest of the Government and of all those who studied financial
-and economic questions, was focussed upon the Woollen Trade, owing to
-the fact that it formed one of the chief sources of revenue for the
-Crown. At the close of the seventeenth century woollen goods formed a
-third of the English exports.[182]
-
-Footnote 182:
-
- Davenant (Inspector-General of Exports and Imports). _An account of
- the trade between Greate Britain, France, Holland, Spain, Portugal,
- Italy, Africa, Newfoundland etc., with the importations and
- exportations of all Commodities, particularly of the Woollen
- Manufactures, delivered in his reports made to the Commissioners for
- Publick Accounts._ 1715, p. 71. Our general exports for the year 1699
- are valued at £6,788,166, 17s. 6¼d. Whereof the Woollen Manufacture
- for the same year are valued at £2,932,292, 17s. 6½d.
-
-Historically the Woollen Trade has a further importance, due to the part
-which it played in the development of capitalism. The manufacture of
-woollen materials had existed in the remote past as a family industry,
-and even in the twentieth century this method still survives in the
-remoter parts of the British Isles; but the manufacture of cloth for
-Foreign trade was from its beginning organized on Capitalistic lines,
-and the copious records which have been preserved of its development,
-illustrate the history of Capitalism itself.
-
-It was estimated that about one million men, women and children were
-exclusively employed in the clothing trade,—“all have their dependence
-solely and wholly upon the said _Manufacture_, without intermixing
-themselves in the labours of _Hedging_, _Ditching_, _Quicksetting_, and
-others the works belonging to Husbandry.”[183]
-
-Footnote 183:
-
- _Proverb Crossed_, p. 8, 1677. See also _Case of the Woollen
- Manufacturers of Great Britain_ which states that they are “the
- subsistance of more than a Million of Poor of both sexes, who are
- employed therein.”
-
-In 1612 eight thousand persons, men, women and children were said to be
-employed in the clothing trade in Tiverton alone.[184] While giving
-933,966 hands as the number properly employed in woollen manufacture,
-another writer says that women and children (girls and boys) were
-employed in the proportion of about eight to one man.[185]
-
-Footnote 184:
-
- Dunsford. _Hist. Tiverton_, p. 408.
-
-Footnote 185:
-
- _Short Essay upon Trade_, p. 18, 1741.
-
-Such figures must be taken with reserve, for the proportions of men and
-women employed varied according to the quality of the stuff woven, and
-pamphleteers of the seventeenth century handled figures with little
-regard to scientific accuracy.[186] But the uncertainty only refers to
-the exact proportion; there can be no doubt that the Woollen Trade
-depended chiefly upon women and children for its labour supply.
-
-Footnote 186:
-
- The following estimates were made by different writers: out of 1187
- persons supposed to be employed for one week in making up 1200 lbs.
- weight of wool, 900 are given as spinners. (_Weavers True Case_, p.
- 42, 1714.)
-
- One pack of short wool finds employment for 63 persons for one week,
- viz: 28 men and boys: 35 women and girls who are only expected to do
- the carding and spinning.
-
- A similar pack made into stockings would provide work for 82 men and
- 102 spinners and if made up for the Spanish trade, a pack of wool
- would employ 52 men and 250 women.
-
- (Haynes (John) _Great Britain’s Glory_, p. 6, p. 8. 1715.)
-
-For the student of social organization it is noteworthy that in the two
-textile trades through which capitalism made in England its most
-striking advances—the woollen trade, and in later years, the cotton
-trade, the labour of women predominated,—a fact which suggests obscure
-actions and reactions between capitalism and the economic position of
-women, worthy of more careful investigation than they have as yet
-received.
-
-The woollen trade passed through a period of rapid progress and
-development in the sixteenth century. It was then that the Clothiers of
-Wiltshire and Somerset acquired wealth and fame, building as a memorial
-for posterity the Tudor houses and churches which still adorn these
-counties. Leland, writing of a typical clothier and his successful
-enterprises and ambitions, describes at Malmesbury, Wiltshire “a litle
-chirch joining to the South side of the _Transeptum_ of thabby chirch,
-... Wevers hath now lomes in this litle chirch, but it stondith ... the
-hole logginges of thabbay be now longging to one Stumpe, an exceding
-riche clothiar that boute them of the king. This Stumpes sunne hath
-maried Sir Edward Baynton’s doughter. This Stumpe was the chef causer
-and contributer to have thabbay chirch made a paroch chirch. At this
-present tyme every corner of the vaste houses of office that belongid to
-thabbay be fulle of lumbes to weve clooth yn, and this Stumpe entendith
-to make a stret or 2 for clothier in the bak vacant ground of the abbay
-that is withyn the toune waulles.”[187]
-
-Footnote 187:
-
- Leland (John), _Itinerary_, 1535-1543; Part II, pp. 131-2.
-
-There must have been a marked tendency at this time to bring the
-wage-earners of the woollen industry under factory control, for a
-description which is given of John Winchcombe’s household says that
-
- “Within one room being large and long
- There stood two hundred Looms full strong,
- Two hundred men the truth is so
- Wrought in these looms all in a row,
- By evry one a pretty boy
- Sate making quills with mickle joy.
- And in another place hard by,
- An hundred women merrily,
- Were carding hard with joyful cheer
- Who singing sate with voices clear.
- And in a chamber close beside,
- Two hundred maidens did abide,
- In petticoats of Stammell red,
- And milk-white kerchers on their head.”[188]
-
-Footnote 188:
-
- Lipson, _Econ. Hist. of England_, p. 420.
-
-These experiments were discontinued, partly because they were
-discountenanced by the Government, which considered the factory
-system rendered the wage-earners too dependent on the clothiers; and
-also because the collection of large numbers of workpeople under one
-roof provided them with the opportunity for combination and
-insubordination.[189] Moreover the factory system was not really
-advantageous to the manufacturer before the introduction of power,
-because he could pay lower wages to the women who worked at home
-than to those who left their families in order to work on his
-premises. Thus the practice was dropped. In 1603 the Wiltshire
-Quarter Sessions published regulations to the effect that “Noe
-Clotheman shall keepe above one lombe in his house, neither any
-weaver that hath a ploughland shall keepe more than one lombe in his
-house. Noe person or persons shall keepe any lombe or lombs goeinge
-in any other house or houses beside their owne, or mayntayne any to
-doe the same.”[190]
-
-Footnote 189:
-
- See _Weavers’ Act_, 1555.
-
-Footnote 190:
-
- _Hist. MSS. Com. Var. Coll._, Vol. I., p. 75, _Wilts. Q.S. Rec._,
- 1603.
-
-Few references occur to the wives of successful clothiers or
-wool-merchants who were actively interested in their husband’s business,
-though no doubt their help was often enlisted in the smaller or more
-struggling concerns. Thus the names of three widows are given in a list
-of eleven persons who were using handicrafts at Maidstone. “The better
-sorte of these we take to bee but of meane ability and most of them
-poore but by theire trade the poore both of the towne and country
-adjoyning are ymploied to spynnyng.”[191]
-
-Footnote 191:
-
- _S.P.D._, cxxix, 45, Ap. 10, 1622, _Return of the Mayor_.
-
-A pamphlet published in 1692 describes how in former days “the Clothier
-that made the cloth, sold it to the merchant, and heard the faults of
-his own cloth; and forc’d sometimes not only to promise amendment
-himself, but to go home and tell _Joan_, to have the Wool better pick’d,
-and the Yarn better spun.”[192]
-
-Footnote 192:
-
- _Clothier’s Complaint, etc._, p. 7, 1692.
-
-A certain Rachel Thiery applied for a monopoly in Southampton for the
-pressing of serges, and having heard that the suit had been referred by
-the Queen to Sir J. Cæsar, the Mayor and Aldermen wrote, July 2, 1599,
-to let him know how inconvenient the granting of the suit would be to
-the town of Southampton.
-
-I. Those strangers who have presses already would be ruined.
-
-II. Many of their men servants (English and strangers) bred up to the
-trade would be idle.
-
-III. “The woeman verie poore and beggarlie, altogether unable to
-performe it in workmanshipp or otherwise.... Againe she is verie idle, a
-prattling gossipp, unfitt to undertake a matter of so great a charge,
-her husband a poore man being departed from her and comorant in Rochell
-these 11 yeres at least. She is verie untrustie and approoved to have
-engaged mens clothes which in times past have been putt to her for
-pressinge. Verie insufficient to answer of herself men’s goodes and
-unable to procure anie good Caution to render the owners there goodes
-againe, havinge not so much as a howse to putt her head in, insomuch as
-(marvellinge under what coullour she doth seeke to attaine to a matter
-of such weight) we ... should hold them worsse than madd that would
-hazzard or comitt there goodes into her handes. And to conclude she is
-generallie held amongest us an unfitt woeman to dwell in a well governed
-Commonwealth.”[193]
-
-Footnote 193:
-
- Lansdowne, 161, fo. 127, 2nd July, 1599.
-
-An incident showing the wife as virtual manager of her husband’s
-business is described in a letter from Thomas Cocks of Crowle to Sir
-Robert Berkely, Kt., in 1633. He writes complaining of a certain
-Careless who obtained a licence to sell ale “because he was a surgeon
-and had many patients come to him for help, and found it a great
-inconvenience for them to go to remote places for their diet and drink,
-and in that respect obtained a licence with a limitation to sell ale to
-none but his patients ... but now of late especially he far exceeds his
-bounds.... A poor fellow who professed himself an extraordinary carder
-and spinner ... was of late set a work by my wife to card and spin
-coarse wool for blankets and when he had gotten some money for his work
-to Careless he goes.” Having got drunk there and coming back in the
-early hours of the morning he made such a noise in the churchyard “being
-near my chamber I woke my wife who called up all my men to go into the
-churchyard and see what the matter was.”[194]
-
-Footnote 194:
-
- Bund (J. W. W.), _Worcestershire Records_, Vol. I., p. 530.
-
-That Mrs. Cocks should engage and direct her husband’s workpeople would
-not be surprising to seventeenth century minds, for women did so
-naturally in family industry; but when capitalized, business tended to
-drift away beyond the wife’s sphere, and thus even then it was unusual
-to find women connected with the clothing trade, except as wage-earners.
-
-Of the processes involved in making cloth, weaving was generally done by
-men, while the spinning, which was equally essential to its production,
-was exclusively done by women and children.
-
-In earlier days weaving had certainly been to some extent a woman’s
-trade. “Webster” which is the feminine form of the old term “Webber” is
-used in old documents, and in these women are also specifically named as
-following this trade; thus on the Suffolk Poll-Tax Roll are entered the
-names of
-
- “John Wros, shepherd.
- Agneta his wife, webster.
- Margery, his daughter, webster.
- Thomas his servant and
- Beatrice his servant.”
-
-It appears also that there were women among the weavers who came from
-abroad to establish the cloth making in England, for a Statute in 1271
-provides that “all workers of woollen cloths, male and female, as well
-of Flanders as of other lands, may safely come into our realm there to
-make cloths ... upon the understanding that those who shall so come and
-make such cloths, shall be quit of toll and tallage, and of payment of
-other customs for their work until the end of five years.”[195]
-
-Footnote 195:
-
- Riley, _Chronicles of London_, p. 142.
-
-Later however, women were excluded from cloth weaving on the ground that
-their strength was insufficient to work the wide and heavy looms in use;
-thus orders were issued for Norwich Worsted Weavers in 1511 forbidding
-women and maids to weave worsteds because “thei bee nott of sufficient
-powre to werke the said worsteddes as thei owte to be wrought.”[196]
-
-Footnote 196:
-
- Tingye, _Norwich Records_, Vol. II., p. 378.
-
-Complaint was made in Bristol in 1461 that weavers “puttyn, occupien,
-and hiren ther wyfes, doughters, and maidens, some to weve in ther owne
-lombes and some to hire them to wirche with othour persons of the said
-crafte by the which many and divers of the king’s liege people, likely
-men to do the king service in his wars and in defence of this his land,
-and sufficiently learned in the said craft, goeth vagrant and
-unoccupied, and may not have their labour to their living.”[197]
-
-Footnote 197:
-
- _Little Red Book of Bristol_, Vol. II., p. 127.
-
-At Kingston upon-Hull, the weavers Composition in 1490, ordained that
-“ther shall no woman worke in any warke concernyng this occupacon wtin
-the towne of Hull, uppon payn of xls. to be devyded in forme by fore
-reherced.”[198]
-
-Footnote 198:
-
- Lambert, _2000 years of Gild Life_, p. 6.
-
-A prohibition of this character could not resist the force of public
-opinion which upheld the woman’s claim to continue in her husband’s
-trade. Widow’s rights are sustained in the Weaver’s Ordinances
-formulated by 25 Charles II. which declare that “it shall be lawfull for
-the Widow of any Weaver (who at the time of his death was a free
-Burgesse of the said Town, and a free Brother of the said Company) to
-use and occupy the said trade by herselfe, her Apprentices and Servants,
-so long as shee continues a Widow and observeth such Orders as are or
-shalbe made to be used amongst the Company of Weavers within this Town
-of Kingston-upon-Hull.”[199]
-
-Footnote 199:
-
- Lambert, 2000 _Years of Gild Life_, p. 210.
-
-Even when virtually excluded from the weaving of “cloaths” women
-continued to be habitually employed in the weaving of other materials. A
-petition was presented on their behalf against an invention which
-threatened a number with unemployment: “Also wee most humbly desire your
-worship that you would have in remembrance that same develishe invention
-which was invented by strangers and brought into this land by them,
-which hath beene the utter overthrowe of many poore people which
-heretofore have lived very well by their handy laboure which nowe are
-forced to goe a begginge and wilbe the utter Destruccion of the trade of
-weaving if some speedy course be not taken therein. Wee meane those
-looms with 12, 15, 20, 18, 20, 24, shuttles which make tape, ribbon,
-stript garteringe and the like, which heretofore was made by poore aged
-woemen and children, but none nowe to be seene.”[200]
-
-Footnote 200:
-
- _S.P.D._, cxxi, 155, 1621.
-
-The Rules of the Society of Weavers of the “Stuffs called Kiddirminster
-Stuffes” required that care should be taken to have apprentices “bound
-according to ye Lawes of ye Realme ... for which they shall be allowed
-2s. 6d. and not above, to be payd by him or her that shall procure the
-same Apprentice to be bound as aforesayd.”[201]
-
-Footnote 201:
-
- Burton, J. R., _Hist. of Kidderminster_, p. 175, _Borough Ordinances_,
- 1650.
-
-John Grove was bound about the year 1655 to “the said George and Mary to
-bee taught and instructed in the trade of a serge-weaver,” and a
-lamentable account is given of the inordinate manner in which the said
-Mary did beat him.[202]
-
-Footnote 202:
-
- _Somerset Q.S. Rec._, Vol. III., pp. 268-9. 1655.
-
-It is impossible from the scanty information available to arrive at a
-final conclusion concerning the position of women weavers. Clearly an
-attempt had been made to exclude them from the more highly skilled
-branches of the trade, but it is also evident that this had not been
-successful in depriving widows of their rights in this respect. Nor does
-the absence of information concerning women weavers prove that they were
-rarely employed in such work. The division of work between women and men
-was a question which aroused little interest at this time and therefore
-references to the part taken by women are accidental. They may have been
-extensively engaged in weaving for they are mentioned as still numerous
-among the handloom weavers of the nineteenth century.[203] Another
-process in the manufacture of cloth which gave employment to women was
-“Burling.” The minister and Mayor of Westbury presented a petition to
-the Wiltshire Quarter Sessions in 1657 on behalf of certain poor people
-who had obtained their living by the “Burling of broad medley clothes,”
-three of whose daughters had now been indicted by certain persons
-desirous to appropriate the said employment to themselves; they show
-“that the said employment of Burling hath not been known to be practised
-among us as any prentice trade, neither hath any been apprentice to it
-as to such, but clothiers have ever putt theyr clothes to Burling to any
-who would undertake the same, as they doe theyr woolles to spinning.
-Also that the said imployment of Burling is a common good to this poore
-town and parish, conducing to the reliefe of many poore families therein
-and the setting of many poore children on work. And if the said
-imployment of Burling should be appropriated by any particular persons
-to themselves it would redound much to the hurt of clothing, and to the
-undoing of many poore families there whoe have theyre cheife
-mainteynance therefrom.”[204]
-
-Footnote 203:
-
- _Report of the Commissioners on the condition of the Handloom
- Weavers_, 1841. x p. 323, _Mr. Chapman’s report_.
-
- “The young weaver just out of his apprenticeship is perhaps as well
- able to earn as he will be at any future period setting aside the
- domestic comforts incidental to the married state, his pecuniary
- condition is in the first instance improved by uniting himself with a
- woman capable of earning perhaps nearly as much as himself, and
- performing for him various offices involving an actual pecuniary
- saving. A married man with an income, the result of the earnings of
- himself and wife of 20s. will enjoy more substantial comfort in every
- way than he alone would enjoy with an income of 15s. a week. This
- alone is an inducement to early marriage. In obedience to this primary
- inducement the weaver almost invariably marries soon after he is out
- of his apprenticeship. But the improvement of comfort which marriage
- brings is of short duration;.... About the tenth year the labour of
- the eldest child becomes available.... Many men have depended on their
- wives & their children to support themselves by their own earnings,
- independent of his wages. The wives and children consequently took to
- the loom, or sought work in the factories; and now that there is
- little or no work in the district, the evil is felt, and the husband
- is obliged to maintain them out of his wages.”
-
-Footnote 204:
-
- _Hist. MSS. Com. Var. Coll._, Vol. I., p. 135, _Wilts. Q.S. Rec._,
- 1657.
-
-It was not however the uncertain part they played in the processes of
-weaving, burling or carding, which constituted the importance of the
-woollen trade in regard to women’s industrial position. Their employment
-in these directions was insignificant compared with the unceasing and
-never satisfied demand which the production of yarn made upon their
-labour. It is impossible to give any estimate of the quantity of wool
-spun for domestic purposes. That this was considerable is shown by a
-recommendation from the Commission appointed to enquire into the decay
-of the Cloth Trade in 1622, who advise “that huswyves may not make cloth
-to sell agayne, but for the provision of themselves and their famylie
-that the clothiers and Drapers be not dis-coraged.”[205]
-
-Footnote 205:
-
- _Report of Commission of Decay of Clothing Trade_, 1622, Stowe, 554,
- fo. 48b.
-
-The housewife span both wool and flax for domestic use, but this aspect
-of her industry will be considered more fully in connection with the
-linen trade, attention here being concentrated on the condition of the
-spinsters in the woollen trade. Their organization varied widely in
-different parts of the country. Sometimes the spinster bought the wool,
-span it, and then sold the yarn, thus securing all the profit of the
-transaction for herself. In other cases she was supplied with the wool
-by the clothier, or a “market spinner” and only received piece wages for
-her labour. The system in vogue was partly decided by the custom of the
-locality, but there was everywhere a tendency to substitute the latter
-for the former method.
-
-Statute I. Edward VI. chap. 6 recites that “the greatest and almost the
-whole number of the poor inhabitants of the county of Norfolk and the
-city of Norwich be, and have been heretofore for a great time maintained
-and gotten their living, by spinning of the wool growing in the said
-county of Norfolk, upon the rock [distaff] into yarn, and by all the
-said time have used to have their access to common markets within the
-said county and city, to buy their wools, there to be spun as is
-aforesaid, of certain persons called retailers of the said wool by eight
-penny worth and twelve penny worth at one time, or thereabouts, and
-selling the same again in yarn, and have not used to buy, ne can buy the
-said wools of the breeders of the said wools by such small parcels, as
-well as for that the said breeders of the said wools will not sell their
-said wools by such small parcels, as also for that the most part of the
-said poor persons dwell far off from the said breeders of the said
-wools.”[206]
-
-Footnote 206:
-
- James (John) _Hist. of Worsted_, p. 98.
-
-During a scarcity of wool the Corporation at Norwich compelled the
-butchers to offer their wool fells exclusively to the spinsters during
-the morning hours until the next sheep-shearing season, so that the
-tawers and others might not be able to outbid them.[207]
-
-Footnote 207:
-
- Tingye, _Norwich_, Vol II. xcvii, 1532.
-
-It is suggested that nearly half the yarn used in the great clothing
-counties at the beginning of the seventeenth century was produced in
-this way: “Yarn is weekly broughte into the market by a great number of
-poor people that will not spin to the clothier for small wages, but have
-stock enough to set themselves on work, and do weekly buy their wool in
-the market by very small parcels according to their use, and weekly
-return it in yarn and make good profit, having the benefit both of their
-labour and of their merchandize and live exceeding well.... So many that
-it is supposed that more than half the cloth of Wilts., Gloucester and
-Somersetshire is made by means of these yarnmakers and poor clothiers
-that depend wholly on the wool chapman which serves them weekly for
-wools either for money or credit.”[208]
-
-Footnote 208:
-
- _S.P.D._ lxxx., 13., Jan. 1615. _General Conditions of Wool and Cloth
- Trade._
-
-Apparently this custom by which the spinsters retained in their own
-hands the merchandize of their goods still prevailed in some counties at
-the beginning of the following century, for it is said in a pamphlet
-which was published in 1741 “that poor People, chiefly Day Labourers,
-... whilst they are employed abroad themselves, get forty or fifty
-Pounds of Wool at a Time, to employ their Wives and Children at home in
-Carding and Spinning, of which when they have 10 or 20 pounds ready for
-the Clothier, they go to Market with it and there sell it, and so return
-home as fast as they can ... the common way the poor women in
-_Hampshire_, _Wiltshire_, and _Dorsetshire_, and I believe in other
-counties, have of getting to Market (especially in the Winter-time) is,
-by the Help of some Farmers’ Waggons, which carry them and their yarn;
-and as soon as the Farmers have set down their corn in the Market, and
-baited their Horses, they return home.... During the Time the waggons
-stop, the poor Women carry their Yarn to the Clothiers for whom they
-work; then they get the few Things they want, and return to the Inn to
-be carried home again.... Many of them ten or twelve miles ... there
-will be in Market time 3 or 400 poor People (chiefly Women) who will
-sell their Goods in about an Hour.”[209]
-
-Footnote 209:
-
- _Remarks upon Mr. Webber’s scheme_, pp. 21-2, 1741.
-
-According to this writer other women worked for the “rich clothier” who
-“makes his whole year’s provision of wool beforehand ... in the winter
-time has it spun by his own spinsters ... at the lowest rate for wages,”
-or they worked for the “market spinner” or middleman who supplied them
-with wool mixed in the right proportions and sold their yarn to the
-clothiers. In either case the return for their labour was less than that
-secured by the spinsters who had sufficient capital to buy their wool
-and sell the yarn in the dearest market. When the Staplers tried to
-secure a monopoly for selling wool, the Growers of wool, or Chapmen
-petitioned in self-defence explaining “that the clothier’s poor are all
-servants working for small wages that doth but keepe them alive, whereas
-the number of people required to work up the same amount of wool in the
-new Drapery is much larger. Moreover, all sorts of these people are
-masters in their trade and work for themselves, they buy and sell their
-materials that they work upon, so that by their merchandize and honest
-labour they live very well. These are served of their wools weekly by
-the wool-buyer.”[210]
-
-Footnote 210:
-
- _S.P.D._, lxxx., 15-16, Jan, 1615.
-
-Opinion was divided as to whether the spinster found it more
-advantageous to work direct for the Clothier or for the Market Spinner.
-A proposal in 1693 to put down the middle-man, was advised against by
-the Justices of Assize for Wiltshire, on the ground that it was “likely
-to cause great reduction of wages and employment to the spinners and the
-poor, and a loss to the growers of wool, and no advantage in the quality
-of the yarn.”
-
-The Justices say in their report: “We finde the markett spinner who
-setts many spinners on worke spinnes not the falce yarn, but the poorer
-sorte of people (who spinne theyr wool in theyr owne howses) for if the
-markett spinners who spinne greate quantitys and sell it in the markett
-should make bad yarne, they should thereby disable themselves to
-maynetayne theyre creditt and livelyhood. And that the more spinners
-there are, the more cloth will be made and the better vent for Woolls
-(which is the staple commodity of the kingdome) and more poor will be
-set on worke. The markett spinners (as is conceived) are as well to be
-regulated by the lawe, for any falcity in mixing of theyr woolles as the
-Clothier is, who is a great markett spinner himselfe and doth both make
-and sell as falce yarne as any market spinner.... We finde the markett
-spinner gives better wages than the Clothier, not for that reason the
-Clothier gives for the falcity of the yarne, but rather in that the
-markett spinners vent much of their yarne to those that make the dyed
-and dressed clothes who give greater prizes than the white men do.”[211]
-
-Footnote 211:
-
- _S.P.D._, ccxliii., 23, July 23, 1633.
-
-The fine yarn used by the Clothiers required considerable skill in
-spinning, and the demand for it was so great in years of expansion that
-large sums of money were paid to persons able to teach the mysteries of
-the craft in a new district. Thus the Earl of Salisbury made an
-agreement in 1608 with Walter Morrell that he should instruct fifty
-persons of the parish of Hatfield, chosen by the Earl of Salisbury, in
-the art of clothing, weaving, etc. He will provide work for all these
-persons to avoid idleness and for the teaching of skill and knowledge in
-clothing will pay for the work at the current rates, except those who
-are apprentices. The Earl of Salisbury on his part will allow Walter
-Morrell a house rent free and will pay him £100 per annum “for
-instructing the fifty persons, to be employed in:—the buying of wool,
-sorting it, picking it, dying it, combing it, both white and mingle
-colour worsted, weaving and warping and quilling both worsted of all
-sorts, dressing both woollen and stuffes, spinning woollen (wofe and
-warpe), spinning all sortes of Kersey both high wheel and low wheel,
-knitting both woollen and worsted.”[212]
-
-Footnote 212:
-
- _S.P.D._, xxxviii., 72, 73, Dec., 1608.
-
-A similar agreement is recorded in 1661-2 between the Bailiffs and
-Burgesses of Aldeburgh and “Edmund Buxton of Stowmarket, for his coming
-to set up his trade of spinning wool in the town and to employ the poor
-therein, paying him £50—for 5 years and £12—for expense of removing,
-with a house rent free and the freedom of the town.”[213]
-
-Footnote 213:
-
- _Hist. MSS. Com. Var. Coll._, Vol. IV., p. 311.
-
-The finest thread was produced on the distaff, but this was a slow
-process, and for commoner work spinning wheels were in habitual use—
-
- “There are, to speed their labor, who prefer
- “Wheels double spol’d, which yield to either hand
- “A sev’ral line; and many, yet adhere
- “To th’ ancient distaff, at the bosom fix’d,
- “Casting the whirling spindle as they walk.”[214]
-
-Footnote 214:
-
- Dyer John., _The Fleece_, 1757.
-
-The demands made on spinning by this ever expanding trade were supplied
-from three sources: (1) the wives of farmers and other well to do
-people, (b) the wives of husbandmen and (c) women who depended wholly on
-spinning for their living, and who are therefore called here spinsters.
-The first care of the farmers’ wives was to provide woollen stuffs for
-the use of their families, but a certain proportion of their yarn found
-its way to the market. The clothiers at Salisbury who made the better
-grades of cloth were said to “buy their yarn of the finer kinds that
-come to the market at from 17d the lb. to 2s. 4d, made all of the finer
-sortes of our owne Welshire wool, and is spun by farmers’ wives and
-other of the better sorte of people within their owne houses, of whose
-names wee keep due Register and do write down with what cardes they
-promise us their several bundles of yarne are carded, and do find such
-people just in what they tell us, or can otherwise controule them when
-wee see the proofe of our cloth in the mill, ... and also some very few
-farmers’ wives who maie peradventure spinne sometimes a little of those
-sortes in their own houses and sell the same in the markett and is verie
-current without mixture of false wooll grease, etc.”[215]
-
-Footnote 215:
-
- _S.P.D._, cclxvii., 17, May 2, 1634. Certificate from Anthony Wither,
- Commissioner of reformation of clothing.
-
-Probably a larger supply of yarn came from the families of husbandmen
-where wife and children devoted themselves to spinning through the long
-winter evenings. Children became proficient in the art at an early age,
-and could often spin a good thread when seven or eight years old. This
-subsidiary employment was not sufficient to supply the demand for yarn,
-and in the clothing counties numbers of women were withdrawn from
-agricultural occupations to depend wholly upon their earnings as
-spinsters.
-
-The demand made by the woollen trade on the labour of children is shown
-by a report from the Justices of the Peace of the Boulton Division of
-the Hundred of Salford, ... “for apprentices there hath beene few found
-since our last certificate by reason of the greate tradeing of fustians
-and woollen cloth within the said division, by reason whereof the
-inhabitants have continuall employment for their children in spinning
-and other necessary labour about the same.”[216]
-
-Footnote 216:
-
- _S.P.D._, ccclxiv., 122, July, 1637.
-
-Those who gave out the wool and collected the yarn were called market
-spinners, but the qualifying term “market” is sometimes omitted, and
-when men are referred to as spinners it may be assumed that they are
-organising the work of the spinsters, and not engaged themselves in the
-process of spinning.[217] Though the demand for yarn generally exceeded
-the supply, wages for spinning remained low throughout the seventeenth
-century. A writer in the first half of the eighteenth century who urges
-the establishment of a nursery of spinners on the estate of an Irish
-landlord admits that their labour is “of all labour on wools the most
-sparingly paid for.”[218]
-
-Footnote 217:
-
- _Somerset Q.S. Rec._, Vol. III., p. 56, 1648. _Complaint ... by ...
- Thos Chambers, Randall Carde, Dorothy Palmer, Stephen Hodges and Wm.
- Hurman, persons ymployed by Henry Denmeade servant to Mr. Thos. Cooke,
- Clothier for the spinning of certen wool and convertinge it into yarne
- and twistinge it thereof for the benefitt of the said Mr. Cooke that
- theire wages for the same spinninge and twistinge had been deteyned
- from them by the said Mr. Cooke ... it is ordered that the said Mr. C.
- doe forthwith pay to the said Thos. Chambers the some of ffowerteene
- shillings to the said Randall Carde the some of nyne shillings and
- fower pence, to the said Dorothy Palmer the some of eighteen shillings
- and one penny to the said Stephen Hodges the some of nyne shillings
- and four pence and to the said Wm. Hurman the some of nyne shillings._
-
-Footnote 218:
-
- _Scheme to prevent the running of Irish wools to France_, p. 19.
-
-Wages for spinning are mentioned in only three of the extant Quarter
-Sessions’ Assessments, and it is not specified whether the material is
-wool or flax:
-
-1654. Devon. 6d. per week with meat and drink, or 1s. 4d. without them.
-
-1688. Bucks. Spinners shall not have by the day more than 4d. without
- meat and drink.
-
-1714. Devon. 1s. per week with meat and drink, 2s. 6d. without them.
-
-These rates are confirmed by entries in account books,[219] but it was
-more usual to pay by the piece. Though it is always more difficult to
-discover the possible earnings per day of women who are working by a
-piece rate in their own homes, it so happens that several of the writers
-who discuss labour questions in the woollen trade specially state that
-their estimates of the wages of spinners are based on full time. John
-Haynes quoted figures in 1715 which work out at nearly 1s. 6d. per week
-for the spinners of wool into stuffs for the Spanish Trade, and about
-2s. 11d. for stockings,[220] another pamphlet gives 24s. as the wages of
-9 spinsters for a week,[221] while in 1763 the author of the “Golden
-Fleece” quotes 2s. 3d. a week for Spanish wools.[222] Another pamphlet
-says that the wages in the fine woollen trade “being chiefly women and
-children, may amount, one with another to £6 per annum.”[223] A petition
-from the weavers, undated, but evidently presented during a season of
-bad trade, declares that “there are not less than a Million of poor
-unhappy objects, _women and children only_, who ... are employed in
-Spinning Yarn for the Woollen Manufacturers; Thousands of these have now
-no work at all, and all of them have suffered an Abatement of Wages; so
-that now a Poor Woman, perhaps a Mother of many Children, must work very
-hard to gain Three Pence or Three Pence Farthing per Day.”[224]
-
-Footnote 219:
-
- (_Howard Household Book_, p. 63, 1613.) “Widow Grame for spinning ij
- stone and 5ˡ of wooll vjs. To the wench that brought it iijid. To
- Ellen for winding yarn iij weekes xviijid.”
-
- (Fell, Sarah; _Household Accounts_, Nov. 28, 1677, p. 439.) “Pd. Agnes
- Holme of Hawxhead foʳ spininge woole here 7 weeks 02.04.”
-
-Footnote 220:
-
- Haynes, _Great Britain’s Glory_, pp. 8, 9.
-
-Footnote 221:
-
- _Weavers’ True Case_, p. 43, 1719.
-
-Footnote 222:
-
- James, John, _Hist. of the Worsted Manufacture_, p. 239.
-
-Footnote 223:
-
- _Further considerations for encouraging the Woollen Manufactures._
-
-Footnote 224:
-
- _Second Humble Address from the Poor Weavers._
-
-Though these wages provided no margin for the support of children, or
-other dependants, it was possible for a woman who could spin the better
-quality yarns to maintain herself in independence.
-
-John Evelyn describes “a maiden of primitive life, the daughter of a
-poore labouring man, who had sustain’d her parents (some time since
-dead) by her labour, and has for many years refus’d marriage, or to
-receive any assistance from the parish, besides yᵉ little hermitage my
-lady gives her rent free: she lives on fourepence a day, which she gets
-by spinning; says she abounds and can give almes to others, living in
-greate humility and content, without any apparent affectation or
-singularity; she is continualy working, praying, or reading, gives a
-good account of her knowledge in religion, visites the sick; is not in
-the least given to talke; very modest, of a simple not unseemly
-behaviour, of a comely countenance, clad very plaine, but cleane and
-tight. In sum she appeares a saint of an extraordinary sort, in so
-religious a life as is seldom met with in villages now-a-daies.”[225]
-
-Footnote 225:
-
- Evelyn (John) _Diary_, Vol. III., p. 7, 1685.
-
-It is probable that the wages for spinning were advanced soon after this
-date, for Defoe writes in 1728 that “the rate for spinning, weaving and
-all other Manufactory-work, I mean in Wool, is so risen, that the Poor
-all over _England_ can now earn or gain near twice as much in a Day, and
-in some Places, more than twice as much as they could get for the same
-work two or three Years ago ... the poor women now get 12d. to 15d. a
-Day for spinning, the men more in proportion, and are full of
-work.”[226] “The Wenches ... wont go to service at 12d. or 18d. a week
-while they can get 7s. to 8s. a Week at spinning; the Men won’t drudge
-at the Plow and Cart &c., and perhaps get £6 a year ... when they can
-sit still and dry within Doors, and get 9s. or 10s. a Week at
-Wool-combing or at Carding.”[227] “Would the poor Maid-Servants who
-choose rather to spin, while they can gain 9s. per Week by their Labour
-than go to Service at 12d. a week to the Farmers Houses as before; I say
-would they sit close to their work, live near and close, as labouring
-and poor People ought to do, and by their Frugality lay up six or seven
-shillings per Week, none could object or blame them for their
-Choice.”[228] Defoe’s statement as to the high rate of wages for
-spinning is supported by an account of the workhouse at Colchester where
-the children’s “Work is Carding & Spinning Wool for the Baymakers; some
-of them will earn 6d. or 7d. a Day.”[229] But there is no sign of these
-higher wages in the seventeenth century.
-
-Footnote 226:
-
- Defoe, _Behaviour_, p. 83.
-
-Footnote 227:
-
- Defoe, _Behaviour_, pp. 84-5.
-
-Footnote 228:
-
- _Ibid._ p. 88.
-
-Footnote 229:
-
- _Acc. of several Workhouses_, p. 59, 1725.
-
-Continual recriminations took place between clothiers and spinsters, who
-accused one another of dishonesty in their dealings. A petition of the
-Worsted Weavers of Norwich and Norfolk, and the Bayes and Sayes makers
-of Essex and Suffolk, to the Council proposes: “That no spinster shall
-winde or reele theire yarne upon shorter reeles (nor fewer thriddes)
-than have bene accustomed, nor ymbessell away their masters’ goodes to
-be punished by the next Justices of the Peace.”[230]
-
-Footnote 230:
-
- _S.P.D._, civ. 97, 1618. _Petition for regulation._
-
-And again in 1622 the Justices of the Peace of Essex inform the Council:
-“Moreover wee understand that the clothiers who put forthe their woolle
-to spinne doe much complaine of the spinsters that they use great deceit
-by reason they doe wynde their yarne into knottes upon shorter reeles
-and fewer threedes by a fifth part than hath beene accustomed. The which
-reeles ought to be two yardes about and the knottes to containe
-fowerscore threedes apeece.”[231]
-
-On the other hand in Wiltshire the weavers, spinners and others
-complained that they “are not able by their diligent labours to gett
-their livinges, by reason that the Clothiers at their will have made
-their workes extreme hard, and abated wages what they please. And some
-of them make such their workfolkes to doe their houshold businesses, to
-trudge in their errands, spoole their chains, twist their list, doe
-every command without giving them bread, drinke or money for many days
-labours.”[232]
-
-Footnote 231:
-
- _S.P.D._, cxxx., 65, May 13, 1662.
-
-Footnote 232:
-
- _Hist. MSS. Com. Var. Coll._, Vol. I., p. 94, _Wilts. Q.S. Rec._,
- 1623.
-
-Report was made to the Council in 1631-2 that the reele-staffe in the
-Eastern Counties “was enlarged by a fift or sixt part longer than have
-bene accustomed and the poores wages never the more encreased.”
-Whereupon the magistrates in Cambridge agreed “that all spinsters shall
-have for the spinning and reeling of six duble knots on the duble reele
-or 12 on the single reele, a penny, which is more by 2d. in the shilling
-than they have had, and all labourers and other artificers have the like
-increase. Essex and Suffolk are ready to make the same increase provided
-that the same reel and rate of increase is used in all other counties
-where the trade of clothing and yarn-making is made, otherwise one
-county will undersell another to the ruin of the clothiers and the poor
-dependent on them. Therefore the Council order that a proportional
-increase of wages is paid according to the increase of the reel and the
-officers employed for keeping a constant reel to give their accounts to
-the Justices of the Assize.”[233]
-
-Footnote 233:
-
- _Council Register_, 2nd March, 1631-2.
-
-Other complaints were made of clothiers who forced their workpeople to
-take goods instead of money in payment of wages. At Southampton in 1666
-thirty-two clothiers, beginning with Joseph Delamot, Alderman, were
-presented for forcing their spinners “to take goods for their work
-whereby the poor were much wronged, being contrary to the statute, for
-all which they were amerced severally.” The records however do not state
-that the fine was exacted.[234]
-
-Footnote 234:
-
- Davies (J. S.) _Southampton_, p. 272.
-
-Low as were the spinster’s wages even in seasons of prosperity, they, in
-common with the better-paid weavers endured the seasons of depression,
-which were characteristic of the woollen industry. The English community
-was as helpless before a period of trade depression as before a season
-of drought or flood. Employment ceased, the masters who had no sale for
-their goods, gave out no material to their workers, and men and women
-alike, who were without land as a resource in this time of need, were
-faced with starvation and despair.[235] The utmost social demoralisation
-ensued, and family life with all its valuable traditions was in many
-cases destroyed.
-
-Footnote 235:
-
- A report to the council from the High Sheriff of Somerset says: “Yet I
- thincke it my duty to acquaynt your Lordshipps that there are such a
- multytude of poore cottages builte upon the highwaies and odd corners
- in every countrie parishe within this countye, and soe stufte with
- poore people that in many of those parishes there are three or fower
- hundred poore of men and women and children that did gett most of
- their lyvinge by spinnyng, carding and such imployments aboute wooll
- and cloath. And the deadness of that trade and want of money is such
- that they are for the most parte without worke, and knowe not how to
- live. This _is_ a great grievance amongst us and tendeth much to
- mutinye.”
-
- (_S.P.D._, cxxx., 73, May 14, 1622, High Sheriff of Somersetshire to
- the Council.)
-
-Complaints from the clothing counties state “That the Poor’s Rates are
-doubled, and in some Places trebbled by the Multitude of Poor Perishing
-and Starving Women and Children being come to the Parishes, while their
-Husbands and Fathers _not able to bear the cries which they could not
-relieve_, are fled into _France_ ... to seek their Bread.”[236]
-
-Footnote 236:
-
- _Second Humble Address from the poor Weavers._
-
-These conditions caused grave anxiety to the Government who attempted to
-force the clothiers to provide for their workpeople.[237]
-
-Footnote 237:
-
- The Council ordered the Justices of the Peace for the counties of
- Wilts, Somerset, Dorset, Devon, Gloucester, Worcester, Oxford, Kent
- and Suffolk, to summon clothiers and “deale effectually with them for
- the employment of such weavers, spinners and other persons, as are now
- out of work.... We may not indure that the cloathiers ... should att
- their pleasure, and without giving knowledge thereof unto this Boarde,
- dismisse their workefolkes, who being many in number and most of them
- of the poorer sort are in such cases likely by their clamour to
- disturb the quiet and government of those partes wherein they live.”
- (_C.R._, 9th Feb., 1621-2.)
-
-Locke reported to Carleton, Feb. 16th, 1622: “In the cloathing counties
-there have bin lately some poore people (such chieflie as gott their
-living by working to Clothiers) that have gathered themselves together
-by Fourty or Fifty in a company and gone to the houses of those they
-thought fittest to relieve them for meate and money which hath bin given
-more of feare than charitie. And they have taken meate openly in the
-markett without paying for it. The Lords have written letters to ten
-Counties where cloathing is most used, that the Clothier shall not put
-off his workemen without acquainting the Councill, signifying that order
-is taken for the buying off their cloathes, and that the wooll grower
-shall afford them his wooll better cheape but yet the cloathiers still
-complaine that they can not sell their cloath in Blackwell
-Hall....”[238]
-
-Footnote 238:
-
- _S.P.D._, cxxvii., 102, Feb. 16, 1622.
-
-The Justices of Assize for Gloucester reported March 13, 1622, that they
-have interviewed the Clothiers who have been forced to put down looms
-through the want of sale for their cloth. The Clothiers maintain that
-this is due to the regulations and practices of the Company of Merchant
-Adventurers. They say that they, the Clothiers, have been working at a
-loss since the deadness of trade about a year ago, “their stocks and
-credits are out in cloth lying upon their hands unsold, and that albeit
-they have bought their woolles at very moderate prices, being such as do
-very much impoverish the grower, yet they cannot sell the cloth made
-thereof but to their intolerable losses, and are enforced to pawne
-theire clothes to keepe theire people in work, which they are not able
-to indure ... that there are at the least 1500 loomes within the County
-of Gloucester and in ... the Citie and that xxs. in money and sixteene
-working persons and upwards doe but weekly mainteyne one loome, which
-doe require 1500li. in money, by the weeke to mainteyne in that trade
-24000 working people besides all others that are releeved thereby, and
-so the wages of a labouring person is little above xiid. the week being
-much too little.”[239]
-
-Footnote 239:
-
- _S.P.D._, cxxviii, 49, March 13, 1622.
-
-In June of the same year the Justices of Gloucester wrote to the
-Council: “The distress of those depending on the Cloth trade grows worse
-and worse. Our County is thereby and through want of money and means in
-these late tymes growne poore, and unable to releeve the infynite nomber
-of poore people residinge within the same (drawne hither by meanes of
-clothing) ... therefore very many of them doe wander, begg and steale
-and are in case to starve as their faces (to our great greefes) doe
-manifest.... The peace is in danger of being broken.”[240]
-
-Footnote 240:
-
- _S.P.D._, cxxxi., 4, June 1, 1622.
-
-The distress was not limited to the rural districts; the records of the
-Borough of Reading describe efforts made there for its alleviation. “At
-this daye the complainte of the poore Spynners and Carders was agayne
-heard etc. The Overseers and Clothiers apoynted to provide and assigne
-them worke apeared and shewed their dilligence therein, yett the
-complaint for lacke of worke increaseth; for a remedye is agreed to be
-thus, viz: every Clothier according to his proportion of ... shall
-weekly assigne and put to spynning in the towne his ordinarye and course
-wooffe wooll, and shall not send it unto the country and if sufficient
-be in the towne to doe it.”[241] At another time it is recorded that “In
-regard of the great clamour of divers poore people lackinge worke and
-employment in spynninge and cardinge in this Towne, yt was this daye
-thought fitt to convent all the undertakers of the stocke given by Mr.
-Kendricke, and uppon their appearaunce it was ordered, and by themselves
-agreed, that every undertaker, for every 300li. shall put a woowf a
-weeke to spyninge within the Towne, as Mr. Mayour shall apoynt, and to
-such spynners as Mr. Mayour shall send to them[242]....”
-
-Footnote 241:
-
- Guilding, _Reading_, Vol. II., p. 159, 1623.
-
-Footnote 242:
-
- _Ibid._, Vol. III., p. 7, Mar. 3, 1629-30.
-
-In these times of distress and in all disputes concerning wages and the
-exactions of the employers, men and women stood together, supporting
-each other in their efforts for the improvement of their lot. Thus the
-Justices of the Peace of Devonshire reported that “complaints were made
-by the most parte of the clothiers weavers, spinsters and fullers
-between Plymouth and Teignmouth,”[243] and the Council is informed that
-at the last Quarter Sessions in Wilts, many “weavers, spinners, and
-fullers for themselves and for manie hundreds more ... complained of
-distress by increasing want of work.... Clothiers giving up their trade,
-etc.”[244]
-
-Footnote 243:
-
- _S.P.D._, xcvii., 85, May 25, 1618. J.P.s of Devonshire to Council.
-
-Footnote 244:
-
- _Ibid._, cxv., 20, May 11, 1620. J.P.s of Wiltshire to Council.
-
-Sometimes the petitions, though presented on behalf of spinners as well
-as weavers, were actually signed only by men. This was the case with the
-Weavers, Fullers and Spinners of Leonard Stanley and King Stanley in
-Gloucestershire, who petitioned on behalf of themselves and others, 800
-at the least, young and old, of the said parishes, “Whereas your poore
-petitioners have heretofore bene well wrought and imployed in our sayd
-occupations belonging to the trade of clothing whereby we were able in
-some poore measure and at a very lowe rate to maintaine ourselves and
-families soe as hitherto they have not suffered any extreme want. But
-now soe it is that we are likely for the time to come never to be
-imployed againe in our callinges and to have our trades become noe
-trades, whereunto we have bene trained up and served as apprentices
-according to the lawe, and wherein we have always spent our whole time
-and are now unfitt for ... other occupations, neither can we be received
-into worke by any clothiers in the whole countrey.”[245]
-
-Footnote 245:
-
- _S.P.D._, ccxliv., 1, Aug. 1, 1633.
-
-At other times women took the lead in demanding the redress of
-grievances from which all were suffering. When the case of the
-say-makers abating the wages of the spinsters, weavers and combers of
-Sudbury was examined by the Justices, the Saymakers alleged that all
-others did the same, but that they were content to give the wages paid
-by them if these were extended by proclamation or otherwise throughout
-the kingdom. “But if the order is not general it will be their undoing
-...” Whereupon the Justices ordered the Saymakers to pay spinsters “for
-every seaven knottes one penny, the reel whereon the yarne is reeled to
-be a yard in length—no longer,” and to pay weavers “12d. a lb. for
-weaving thereof for white sayes under 5 lbs. weight.”[246]
-
-Footnote 246:
-
- _S.P.D._, clxxxix., 40, Ap. 27, 1631. J.P.s of Essex to Council.
-
-Shortly afterwards the Council received a petition from the Mayor asking
-to be heard by the Council or Commissioners to answer the complaint made
-against them. “by Silvia Harber widow set on worke by Richard Skinnir of
-Sudbury gent ... for abridging and wronging of the spinsters and weavers
-of the said borough in their wages and for some other wrongs supposed to
-bee done to the said Silvia Harber,” followed by an affidavit stating
-“Wee whose names are hereunder written doe testifye as followeth with
-our severell handes to our testification.
-
-“1. That one Silvia Harber of our Towne of Sudbury comonly called Luce
-Harbor did say that shee had never undertaken to peticion the Lordes of
-the Counsell in the Behalfe of the Spinsters of Sudbury aforesaid but by
-the inducement of Richard Skinner gentleman of the Towne aforesaid who
-sent for her twoe or three times before shee would goe unto him for that
-purpose, and when shee came to him hee sent her to London and bare her
-charges. Witness, Daniel Biat Clement Shelley.
-
-“2. That having conference with Richard Skinner aforesaid Gentleman, hee
-did confesse that hee would never have made any stir of complaint
-against the saymakers in behalf of weavers and spinsters, but that one
-Thomas Woodes of the towne abovesaid had given him Distaystfull wordes.”
-Witness, Vincent Cocke.[247]
-
-Footnote 247:
-
- _S.P.D._, cxcvii., 72, July, 1631. Affidavit about Saymakers in County
- of Suffolk.
-
-No organisation appears to have been formed by the wage-earners in the
-woollen Trade. Their demonstrations against employers were as yet local
-and sporadic. The very nature of their industry and the requirements of
-its capitalistic organisation would have rendered abortive on their part
-the attempt to raise wages by restricting the numbers of persons
-admitted into the trade; but the co-operation in trade disputes between
-the men and women engaged in this industry, forms a marked contrast to
-the conditions which were now beginning to prevail in the apprentice
-trades and which will be described later. Though without immediate
-result in the woollen trade, it may be assumed that it was this habit of
-standing shoulder to shoulder, regardless of sex-jealousy, which ensured
-that when Industrialism attained a further development in the closely
-allied cotton trade, the union which was then called into being embraced
-men and women on almost equal terms.
-
-The broad outline of the position of women in the woollen trade as it
-was established in the seventeenth century shows them taking little, if
-any, part in the management of the large and profitable undertakings of
-Clothiers and Wool-merchants. Their industrial position was that of
-wage-earners, and though the demand for their labour generally exceeded
-the supply, yet the wages they received were barely sufficient for their
-individual maintenance, regardless of the fact that in most cases they
-were wholly or partly supporting children or other dependants.
-
-The higher rates of pay for spinning appear to have been secured by the
-women who did not depend wholly upon it for their living, but could buy
-wool, spin it at their leisure, and sell the yarn in the dearest market;
-while those who worked all the year round for clothiers or middlemen,
-were often beaten down in their wages and were subject to exactions and
-oppression.
-
-
- C. _Linen._
-
-While the woollen trade had for centuries been developing under the
-direction of capitalism, it was only in the seventeenth century that
-this influence begins to show itself in the production of linen.
-Following the example of the clothiers, attempts were then made to
-manufacture linen on a large scale. For example, Celia Fiennes describes
-Malton as a “pretty large town built of Stone but poor; ... there was
-one Mr. Paumes that marry’d a relation of mine, Lord Ewers’ Coeheiress
-who is landlady of almost all yᵉ town. She has a pretty house in the
-place. There is the ruins of a very great house whᶜʰ belonged to yᵉ
-family but they not agreeing about it Caused yᵉ defaceing of it. She now
-makes use of yᵉ roomes off yᵉ out-buildings and gate house for weaving
-and Linning Cloth, haveing set up a manuffactory for Linnen whᶜʰ does
-Employ many poor people.”[248]
-
-Footnote 248:
-
- Fiennes (Celia) p. 74. _Through England on a Side-saddle._
-
-In spite of such innovations the production of linen retained for the
-most part its character as one of the crafts “yet left of that innocent
-old world.” The housewife, assisted by servants and children span flax
-and hemp for household linen, underclothes, children’s frocks and other
-purposes, and then took her thread to the local weaver who wove it to
-her order. Thus Richard Stapley, Gent., enters in his Diary: “A weaver
-fetched 11 pounds of flaxen yarn to make a bedticke; and he brought me
-ten yds of ticking for yᵉ bed, 3 yds and ¾ of narrow ticking for yᵉ
-bolster & for yᵉ weaving of which I paid him 10s. and ye flax cost 8d.
-per pound. My mother spun it for me, and I had it made into a bed by
-John Dennit, a tailor, of Twineham for 8d. on Wednesday, July 18th, and
-it was filled on Saturday, August 4th by Jonas Humphrey of Twineham for
-6d.” The weaver brought it home July 6th.[249] Similarly Sarah Fell
-enters in her Household book: “Nov. 18th, 1675, by mᵒ. pᵈ. Geo. ffell
-weaver foʳ workeinge 32: ells of hempe tow cloth of Mothrs. at ld½ ell.
-000.04.00.”[250]
-
-Footnote 249:
-
- _Suss. Arch. Coll._, Vol. II., p. 121. _Extracts from the Diary of
- Richard Stapley, Gent._, 1682-1724.
-
-Footnote 250:
-
- Fell (Sarah) _Household Accts._, p. 233.
-
-By the industry and foresight of its female members the ordinary
-household was supplied with all its necessary linen without any need for
-entering the market, the expenses of middlemen and salesmen being so
-avoided. Nevertheless, it is evident that a considerable sale for linen
-had always existed, for the linen drapers were an important corporation
-in many towns. This sale was increased through an invention made about
-the middle of the century: By printing patterns on linen a material was
-produced which closely imitated the costly muslins, or calicoes as they
-were then called, imported from India; but at so reasonable a price that
-they were within the reach of a servant’s purse. Servants were therefore
-able to go out in dresses scarcely distinguishable from their
-mistresses’, and the sale of woollen and silk goods was seriously
-affected. The woollen trade became alarmed; riots took place; weavers
-assaulted women who were wearing printed linens in the streets, and
-finally, Parliament, always tender to the woollen trade, which furnished
-so large a part of the national revenue, prohibited their use
-altogether. The linen printers recognising that “the Reason why the
-_English_ Manufacture of linnen is not so much taken notice of as the
-_Scotch_ or _Irish_, is this, the _English_ is mostly consumed in the
-Country, ... whereas the _Scotch_ and _Irish_ must come by sea and make
-a Figure at our custom’s house,”[251] urged in their defence that “the
-linens printed are chiefly the Growth and Manufacture of _North Britain_
-pay 3d. per Yard to the Crown, ... and Employ so many Thousands of
-_British_ poor, as will undoubtedly entitle them to the Care of a
-British Parliament.”[252]
-
-Footnote 251:
-
- _Case of British and Irish Manufacture of Linnen._
-
-Footnote 252:
-
- _Case of the Linen Drapers._
-
-But even this argument was unavailing against the political influence of
-the woollen trade. The spirit of the time favouring the spread of
-capitalistic enterprise from the woollen trade into other fields of
-action, an attempt was now made to form a Linen Company. Pamphlets
-written for and against this project furnish many details of the
-conditions then prevailing in the manufacture of linen. “How,” it was
-said, will the establishment of a Linnen Company “affect the Kingdom in
-the two Pillars that support it, that of the Rents of Land and the
-imploying our Ships and Men at Sea, which are thought the Walls of the
-Nation. For the Rents of Land they must certainly fall, for that one
-Acre of Flax will imploy as many Hands the year round, as the Wooll of
-Sheep that graze twenty Acres of Ground. The Linnen Manufactory imploys
-few men, the Woollen most, Weaving, Combing, Dressing, Shearing, Dying,
-etc. These Eat and Drink more than Women and Children; and so as the
-Land that the Sheep graze on raiseth the Rent, so will the Arable and
-Pasture that bears Corn, and breeds Cattle for their Subsistence. Then
-for the Employment of our Shipping, it will never be pretended that we
-can arrive to Exportation of Linnen; there are others and too many
-before us in that.... That Projectors and Courtiers should be inspired
-with New Lights, and out of love to the Nation, create new Methods in
-Trades, that none before found out; and by inclosing Commons the Liberty
-of Trade into Shares, in the first place for themselves, and then for
-such others as will pay for both, is, I must confess, to me, a Mystery I
-desire to be a Stranger unto.... The very Name of a Company and
-Joint-Stock in Trade, is a spell to drive away, and keep out of that
-place where they reside, all men of Industry.... The great motive to
-Labour and Incouragement of Trade, is an equal Freedom, and that none
-may be secluded from the delightful Walks of Liberty ... a Subjection in
-Manufactories where a People are obliged to one Master, tho’ they have
-the full Value of their Labour, is not pleasing, they think themselves
-in perpetual Servitude, and so it is observed in _Ireland_, where the
-_Irish_ made a Trade of Linnen Yarn, no Man could ingage them, but they
-would go to the Market and be better satisfied with a less price, than
-to be obliged to one master.... There was much more Reason for a Company
-and Joint-stock to set up the Woollen Manufactory, in that ignorant Age,
-than there is for this of the Linnen Manufactory; that of the Woollen
-was a new Art not known in this Kingdom, it required a great Stock to
-manage, there was required Foreign as well as Native Commodities to
-carry it on ... and when the Manufactory was made, there must be Skill
-and Interest abroad to introduce the Commodity where others had the
-Trade before them; but there is nothing of all this in the Linnen
-Manufactory; Nature seems to design it for the weaker Sex. The best of
-Linnen for Service is called House Wife’s Cloth, here then is no need of
-the Broad Seal, or Joint-Stock to establish the Methods for the good
-Wife’s weeding her Flax-garden, or how soon her Maid shall sit to her
-Wheel after washing her Dishes; the good Woman is Lady of the Soil, and
-holds a Court within herself, throws the Seed into the Ground, and works
-it till she brings it there again, I mean her Web to the bleaching
-Ground.... To appropriate this which the poorest Family may by Labour
-arrive unto, that is, finish and bring to Market a Piece of Cloth, to me
-seems an infallible Expedient to discourage universal Industry.... The
-Linnen Manufactory above any Trade I know, if (which I must confess I
-doubt) it be for the Good of the Nation, requires more Charity than
-Grandeur to carry it on, the poor Spinner comes as often to her Master
-for Charity to a sick Child, or a Plaister for a Sore, as for Wages; and
-this she cannot have of a Company, but rather less for her labour, when
-they have beat all private Undertakers out. These poor Spinners can now
-come to their Master’s Doors at a good time, and eat of their good tho’
-poor master’s Chear; they can reason with him, if any mistake, or
-hardship be put upon them, and this poor People love to do, and not be
-at the Dispose of Servants, as they must be where their Access can only
-be by Doorkeepers, Clerks, etc., to the Governors of the Company.”[253]
-
-Footnote 253:
-
- Linnen and Woollen Manufactory, p. 4-8, 1691.
-
-On the other side it was urged that “All the Arguments that can be
-offer’d for Encouraging the woollen manufacture in _England_ conclude as
-strongly in proportion for Encouraging the linnen manufacture in
-_Scotland_. ’Tis the ancient Staple Commodity there, as the Woollen is
-here.”[254]
-
-Footnote 254:
-
- _True case of the Scots Linen Manufacture._
-
-The part taken by women in the production of linen resembled their share
-in woollen manufactures. Some were weavers; thus Oliver Heywood says
-that his brother-in-law, who afterwards traded in fustians, was brought
-up in Halifax with Elizabeth Roberts, a linen weaver.[255] Entries in
-the Foulis Account Book show that they were sometimes employed in
-bleaching but spinning was the only process which depended exclusively
-on their labour.
-
-Footnote 255:
-
- Heywood (Rev. Oliver) _Autobiography_, Vol. I., p. 36.
-
-The rates of pay for spinning flax and hemp were even lower than those
-for spinning wool. Fitzherbert expressly says that in his time no woman
-could get her living by spinning linen.[256] The market price was of
-little moment to well-to-do women who span thread for their family’s use
-and who valued the product of their labour by its utility and not by its
-return in money value; but the women who depended on spinning for their
-living were virtually paupers, as is shown by the terms in which
-reference is made to them:—“shee beeinge very poore, gettinge her
-livinge by spinninge and in the nature of a widowe, her husband beeinge
-in the service of His Majesty.”[257]
-
-Footnote 256:
-
- Ante, p. 48.
-
-Footnote 257:
-
- _S.P.D._, cccclvii., 3., June 13, 1640.
-
-Yet the demand for yarn and thread was so great that if spinners had
-been paid a living wage there would have been scarcely any need for poor
-relief.
-
-The relation between low wages and pauperism was hardly even suspected
-at this time, and though the spinsters’ maximum wages were settled at
-Quarter Sessions, no effort was made to raise them to a subsistence
-level. Instead of attempting to do so Parish Authorities accepted
-pauperism as “the act of God,” and concentrated their attention on the
-task of reducing rates as far as possible by forcing the pauper women
-and children, who had become impotent or vicious through neglect and
-under-feeding, to spin the thread needed by the community. Schemes for
-this purpose were started all over the country; a few examples will show
-their general scope. At Nottingham it was arranged for Robert Hassard to
-“Receave pore children to the number of viij. or more, ... and to haue
-the benefitt of theire workes and labours for the first Moneth, and the
-towne to allowe him towards their dyett, for everie one xijid. a Weeke,
-and theire parents to fynde them lodginge; and Robert Hassard to be
-carefull to teache and instructe them speedyly in the spyninge and
-workinge heare, to be fitt to make heare-cloth, and allsoe in cardinge
-and spyninge of hards to make candle weeke, and hee to geue them
-correccion, when need ys, and the greate wheeles to be called in, and to
-be delivered for the vse of these ymployments.”[258]
-
-Footnote 258:
-
- _Ibid._, pp. 259-60, 1649.
-
-A few years later in the scheme “for setting the poore on worke” the
-following rates of pay were established:—
-
-6d. per pound for cardinge and spinning finest wool.
-
-5d. per pound for ye second sort.
-
-4d. ob. (= _obolus_, ½d.) for ye third sorte.
-
-1d. per Ley [skein] for ye onely spinninge all sortes of linen, the
-reele beeing 4 yards.
-
-ob. per pound for cardinge candleweake.
-
-1d. per pound for pulling midling [coarser part] out of it.
-
-1d. per pound for spininge candleweake.[259]
-
-Footnote 259:
-
- _Nottingham Records_, Vol. V., pp. 174-5, 1636.
-
-Orders for the Workhouse at Westminster in 1560, read that “old Women or
-middle-Aged that might work, and went a Gooding, should be Hatchilers of
-the Flax; and one Matron over them. That common Hedges, and such like
-lusty naughty Packs, should be set to spinning; and one according to be
-set over them. Children that were above Six and not twelve Years of Age
-should be sent to winde Quills to the Weavers.”[260]
-
-Footnote 260:
-
- Stow, _London_, Book VI., p. 60.
-
-At a later date in London “Besides the relieving and educating of poor
-friendless harborless children in Learning and in Arts, many hundreds of
-poor Families are imployed and relieved by the said Corporation in the
-Manufactory of Spinning and Weaving: and whosoever doth repair either to
-the Wardrobe near Black-friars, or to Heiden-house in the Minories, may
-have materials of Flax, Hemp, or Towe to spin at their own houses ...
-leaving so much money as the said materials cost, until it be brought
-again in Yarn; at which time they shall receive money for their work ...
-every one is paid according to the fineness or coarseness of the Yarn
-they spin ... so that none are necessitated to live idly that are
-desirous or willing to work. And it is to be wished and desired, that
-the Magistrates of this city would assist this Corporation ... in
-supressing of Vagrants and common Beggars ... that so abound to the
-hindrance of the Charity of many pious people towards this good
-work.”[261]
-
-Footnote 261:
-
- _Poor Out-cast Children’s Song and Cry._
-
-The Cowden overseers carried out a scheme of work for the poor from 1600
-to 1627, buying flax and having it spun and woven into canvas. The work
-generally paid for itself; only one year is a loss of 7s. 8d. entered,
-and during the first seventeen years the amount expended yearly in cash
-and relief did not exceed £6 11s. rising then in 1620 to £28 5s. 10d.,
-after which it fell again. The scheme was finally abandoned in 1627, the
-relief immediately rising to £43 7s. 6d.[262]
-
-Footnote 262:
-
- _Suss. Arch. Coll._, Vol. xx., pp. 99-100, _Acct. Book of Cowdon_.
-
-Richard Dunning describes how in Devon “for Employing Women, ... We
-agreed with one Person, who usually Employed several _Spinsters_, ... he
-was to employ in _Spinning_, _Carding_, etc., all such Women as by
-direction of the Overseers should apply to him for Work, to pay them
-such Wages as they should deserve.”[263]
-
-Footnote 263:
-
- Dunning, _Plain and Easie Method_, p. 8, 1686.
-
-“Mary Harrison, daughter of Henry Harrison, was comited to the hospitall
-at Reading to be taught to spyn and earne her livinge.”[264] Similarly
-at Dorchester “Sarah Handcock of this Borough having this day been
-complayned of for her disorderly carriage and scolding in the work house
-... ... among the spinsters, is now ordered to come no more to the work
-house to work there, but is to work elsewhere and follow her work, or to
-be further delt withall according to the lawe.”[265]
-
-Footnote 264:
-
- Guilding, _Reading_, Vol. II., p. 294.
-
-Footnote 265:
-
- Mayo (C.H.) _Municipal Records of Dorchester_, p. 667, 1635.
-
-At Dorchester a school was maintained for some years in which poor
-children were taught spinning: “This day John Tarrenton ... is agreed
-withall to vndertake charge and to be master of the Hospitall to employ
-halfe the children at present at burlinge,[266] and afterwards the
-others as they are willing and able, To have the howse and Tenne per
-annum: wages for the presente, and yf all the Children come into
-burlinge, and ther be no need of the women that doe now teach them to
-spinne, then the Towne to consyder of Tarrington to giue him either part
-or all, that is ix pownd, the women now hath....”[267]
-
-Footnote 266:
-
- To burl, “to dress cloth as fullers do.”
-
-Footnote 267:
-
- Mayo (C. H.), _Municipal Records of Dorchester_, p. 515, 1638.
-
-Another entry, February 3rd, 1644-5, records that “Mr. Speering doth
-agree to provide spinning work for such poore persons that shall spin
-with those turnes as are now there [in the hospital house] ... and to
-pay the poore for their spinning after the vsual rates for the worke
-they doe.”[268]
-
-Footnote 268:
-
- _Ibid._ p. 521.
-
-In 1649 it is entered “This day Thos. Clench was here, and demanded 10
-_li._ per ann. more than the stocke of the Hospital, which is 150 _li._
-lent him for the furnishing of the house with worke for spinners, and
-for the overlooking to the children ... the spinners shall have all the
-yeare 3½d. a _li._ for yearne ... and that there be as many children
-kept aworke as the roomes will hold ... wee shall take into
-consideracion the setting of the poore on worke in spinning of worsted,
-and knitting of stockins, and also of setting vp a trade of making
-sackcloth.”[269]
-
-Footnote 269:
-
- _Ibid._ pp. 517-8.
-
-Schemes for teaching spinning were welcomed with enthusiasm by the
-economists of the period, because in many districts the poor rates had
-risen to an alarming height. They believed that if only the poor would
-work all would be well. One writer urged “That if the Poor of the Place
-do not know how to spin, or to do the Manufacture of that Place, that
-then there be Dames hired at the Parish-Charge to teach them; and Men
-may learn to spin as well as Women, and Earn as much money at it as they
-can at many other employments.”[270] Another writer calculated that if
-so employed “ixcl children whᶜʰ daielie was ydle may earne one wᵗ
-another vjid. a weke whᶜʰ a mownte in the yere to jMiijcxxxvˡⁱ. Also
-that jciiijxx women ... ar hable to earne at lest some xijid., some
-xxd., and some ijs. vjid. a weeke.”[271]
-
-Footnote 270:
-
- _Trade of England_, p. 10, 1681.
-
-Footnote 271:
-
- Tingey, _Norwich_, Vol. II., p. 355.
-
-This zest for teaching spinning was partly due to the fact that the
-clothiers were represented on the local authorities, and often the
-extending of their business was hampered by the shortage of spinsters.
-But the flaw in all these arrangements was the fact that spinning
-remained in most cases a grant in aid, and could not, owing to the low
-wages paid, maintain a family, scarcely even an individual, on the level
-of independence.
-
-Children could not live on 6d. a week, or grown women on 1s. or 1s. 8d.
-a week. And so the women, when they depended wholly upon spinning flax
-for their living, became paupers, suffering the degradation and loss of
-power by malnutrition which that condition implies.
-
-In a few cases this unsatisfactory aspect of spinning was perceived by
-those who were charged with relieving the poor. Thus, when a workhouse
-was opened in Bristol in 1654, the spinning scheme was soon abandoned as
-unprofitable.[272] Later, when girls were again taught spinning, the
-managers of the school “soon found that the great cause of begging did
-proceed from the low wages for Labour; for after about eight months time
-our children could not get half so much as we expended in their
-provisions. The manufacturers ... were always complaining the Yarn was
-spun couarse, but would not advance above eightpence per pound for
-spinning, and we must either take this or have no work.” Finally the
-Governor took pains therefore to teach them to produce a finer yarn at
-2s. to 3s. 6d. per pound. This paid better, and would have been more
-profitable still if the girls as they grew older had not been sent to
-service or put into the kitchen.[273]
-
-Footnote 272:
-
- Latimer, _Annals of Bristol_, p. 249.
-
-Footnote 273:
-
- Cary, (John) _Proceedings of Corporation of Bristol_, p. 13, 1700.
-
-Thomas Firmin, after a prolonged effort to help the poor in London, came
-to a similar conclusion. He explains that “the Poor of this Parish, tho’
-many, are yet not so many as in some others; yet, even here there are
-many poor people, who receive Flax to spin, tho’ they are not all
-Pensioners to the Parish, nor, I hope, ever will be, it being my design
-to prevent that as much as may be; ... there are above 500 more out of
-other Parishes in and about the City of _London_; some of which do
-constantly follow this Employment, and others only when they have no
-better; As, suppose a poor Woman that goes three dayes a Week to Wash or
-Scoure abroad, or one that is employed in Nurse-keeping three or four
-Months in a Year, or a poor Market-woman, who attends three or four
-Mornings in a Week with her Basket, and all the rest of the time these
-folks have little or nothing to do; but by means of this spinning are
-not only kept within doors ... but made much more happy and
-chearful.”[274]
-
-Footnote 274:
-
- Firmin, _Some Proposals_, p. 19, 1678.
-
-Firmin began his benevolent work in an optimistic spirit, “had you seen,
-as I have done many a time, with what joy and satisfaction, many Poor
-People have brought home their Work, and received their money for it,
-you would think no Charity in the World like unto it. Do not imagine
-that all the Poor People in _England_, are like unto those Vagrants you
-find up and down in the Streets. No, there are many Thousands whose
-necessities are very great, and yet do what they can by their Honest
-Labour to help themselves; and many times they would do more than they
-do but for want of Employment. Several that I have now working to me do
-spin, some fifteen, some sixteen, hours in four and twenty, and had much
-rather do it than be idle.”[275]
-
-Footnote 275:
-
- Firmin, Thomas, _Life_, pp. 31-32, 1698.
-
-The work developed until “He employed in this manufacture some times
-1600, some times 1700 Spinners, besides Dressers of flax, Weavers and
-others. Because he found that his Poor must work sixteen hours in the
-day to earn sixpence, and thought their necessities and labour were not
-sufficiently supplied or recompensed by these earnings; therefore he was
-wont to distribute Charity among them ... without which Charity some of
-them had perished for want, when either they or their children fell
-ill.... Whoever of the Spinners brought in two pound of Yarn might take
-away with ’em a Peck of Coals. Because they soiled themselves by
-carrying away Coals in their Aprons or Skirts ... he gave ’em canvass
-bags. By the assistance and order of his Friends he gave to Men, Women
-and Children 3,000 Shirts and Shifts in two years.”[276]
-
-Footnote 276:
-
- _Ibid._ pp. 31-2, 1698.
-
-“In above £4000, laid out the last Year, reckning House-rent, Servants
-wages, Loss by Learners, with the interest of the Money, there was not
-above £200 lost, one chief reason of which was the kindness of several
-Persons, who took off good quantities ... at the price they cost me to
-spin and weave ... and ... the East India Co., gave encouragement to
-make their bags.” But the loss increased as time went on.... “In 1690
-his design of employing the poor to spin flax was taken up by the
-Patentees of the Linen Manufacture, who made the Poor and others, whom
-they employed, to work cheaper; yet that was not sufficient to encourage
-them to continue the manufacture.... The poor spinners, being thus
-deserted, Mr. _Firmin_ returned to ’em again; and managed that trade as
-he was wont; But so, that he made it bear almost its own Charges. But
-that their smaller Wages might be comfortable to them he was more
-Charitable to ’em, and begged for ’em of almost all Persons of Rank with
-whom he had intimacy, or so much as Friendship. He would also carry his
-Cloth to divers, with whom he scarce had any acquaintance, telling ’em
-_it was the Poor’s cloth, which in conscience they ought to buy at the
-Price it could be afforded_.”[277] ... Finally, “he was persuaded by
-some, to make trial of the _Woollen Manufacture_; because at this, the
-Poor might make better wages, than at Linen-work. But the price of wool
-advancing very much, and the _London_-Spinsters being almost wholly
-unskilful at Drawing a Woollen-Thread, after a considerable loss ... and
-29 months trial he gave off the project.”[278]
-
-Footnote 277:
-
- Firmin (Thomas) _Life_, pp. 33-6.
-
-Footnote 278:
-
- _Ibid._ pp. 39-40.
-
-Firmin’s experiment, corroborating as it does the results of other
-efforts at poor relief, shows that at this time women could not maintain
-themselves by the wages of flax spinning; still less could they, when
-widows, provide for their children by this means.
-
-But though the spinster, when working for wages received so small a
-return for her labour, it must not be forgotten that flax spinning was
-chiefly a domestic art, in which the whole value of the woman’s labour
-was secured to her family, unaffected by the rate of wages. Therefore
-the value of women’s labour in spinning flax must not be judged only
-according to the wages which they received, but was more truly
-represented by the quantity of linen which they produced for household
-use.
-
-
- D. _Silk, and Gold and Silver._
-
-The history of the Silk Trade differs widely from that of either the
-Woollen or Linen Trades. The conditions of its manufacture during the
-fifteenth century are described with great clearness in a petition
-presented to Henry VI. by the silk weavers in 1455, which “Sheweth unto
-youre grete wisdoms, and also prayen and besechen the Silkewymmen and
-Throwestres of the Craftes and occupation of Silkewerk within the Citee
-of London, which be and have been Craftes of wymmen within the same
-Citee of tyme that noo mynde renneth unto the contrarie. That where it
-is pleasyng to God that all his Creatures be set in vertueux occupation
-and labour accordyng to their degrees, and convenient for thoo places
-where their abode is, to the nourishing of virtue and eschewyng of vices
-and ydelness. And where upon the same Craftes, before this tyme, many a
-wurshipfull woman within the seid Citee have lyved full hounourably, and
-therwith many good Housholdes kept, and many Gentilwymmen and other in
-grete noumbre like as there nowe be moo than a M., have been drawen
-under theym in lernyng the same Craftes and occupation full vertueusly,
-unto the plesaunce of God, whereby afterward they have growe to grete
-wurship, and never any thing of Silke brought into yis lande concerning
-the same Craftes and occupation in eny wise wrought, but in rawe Silk
-allone unwrought”; but now wrought goods are introduced and it is
-impossible any longer to obtain rawe material except of the worst
-quality ... “the sufferaunce whereof, hath caused and is like to cause,
-grete ydelness amongs yonge Gentilwymmen and oyer apprentices of the
-same Craftes within ye said Citee, and also leying doun of many good and
-notable Housholdes of them that have occupied the same Craftes, which be
-convenient, worshipfull and accordyng for Gentilwymmen, and oyer wymmen
-of wurship, aswele within ye same Citee as all oyer places within this
-Reaume.” The petitioners assumed that “Every wele disposed persone of
-this land, by reason and naturall favour, wold rather that wymmen of
-their nation born and owen blode hadde the occupation thereof, than
-strange people of oyer landes.”[279]
-
-Footnote 279:
-
- _Rolls of Parliament_, V., 325. _A Petition of Silk Weavers_, 34 Henry
- VI., c. 55.
-
-The petition received due attention, Statute 33, Henry VI enacting that
-“Whereas it is shewed to our Sovereign Lord the King in his said
-parliament, by the grevous complaint of the silk women and spinners of
-the mystery and occupation of silk-working, within the city of London,
-how that divers Lombards and other strangers, imagining to destroy the
-said mystery, and all such virtuous occupations of women in the said
-Realm, to enrich themselves ... have brought ... such silk so made,
-wrought, twined, ribbands, and chains falsely and deceitfully wrought,
-all manner girdels and other things concerning the said mystery and
-occupation, in no manner wise bringing any good silk unwrought, as they
-were wont.” Therefore the importation of “any merchandise ... touching
-or concerning the mystery of silk women, (girdels which come from Genoa
-only excepted,)” is forbidden.[280]
-
-Footnote 280:
-
- _Statutes_, II., p. 374, 33 Henry VI., c. 5.
-
-This statute was re-enacted in succeeding reigns with the further
-explanation that “as well men as women” gained their living by this
-trade.
-
-Few incidents reveal more clearly than do these petitions the gulf
-separating the conception of women’s sphere in life which prevailed in
-mediæval London, from that which governed society in the first decade of
-the twentieth century. The contrast is so great that it becomes
-difficult to adjust one’s vision to the implications which the former
-contains. Other incidents can be quoted of the independence, enterprise,
-and capacity manifested by the prosperous women of the merchant class in
-London during the Middle Ages. Thus Rose de Burford, the wife of a
-wealthy London merchant, engaged in trading transactions on a large
-scale both before and after her husband’s death. She lent money to the
-Bishop in 1318, and received 100 Marks for a cope embroidered with
-coral. She petitioned for the repayment of a loan made by her husband
-for the Scottish wars, finally proposing that this should be allowed her
-off the customs which she would be liable to pay on account of wool
-about to be shipped from the Port of London.[281]
-
-Footnote 281:
-
- By kind permission of Miss Eileen Power.
-
-It is, however, a long cry from the days of Rose de Burford to the
-seventeenth century, when “gentilwymmen and other wymmen of worship” no
-longer made an honourable living by the silk trade; which trade, in
-spite of protecting statutes, had become the refuge of paupers. To
-obviate the difficulties of an exclusive reliance on foreign supplies
-for the raw material of the silk trade, James I. ordered the planting of
-10,000 mulberry trees so that “multitudes of persons of both sexes and
-all ages, such as in regard of impotence are unfitted for other labour,
-may bee set on worke, comforted and releved.”[282]
-
-Footnote 282:
-
- _S.P.D._, xxvi., 6. Jan. 1607.
-
-The unsatisfactory state of the trade is shown in a petition from the
-merchants, silk men, and others trading for silk, asking for a charter
-of incorporation because “the trade of silke is now become great whereby
-... customes are increased and many thousands of poore men, women and
-children sett on worke and mayntayned. And forasmuch as the first
-beginning of this trade did take its being from women then called
-silkwomen who brought upp men servants, that since have become free of
-all or moste of the severall guilds and corporacions of London, whose
-ordinances beeing for other particular trades, meet not with, nor have
-power to reprove such abuses and deceipts as either have or are likely
-still to growe upon the silk trade.”[283]
-
-Footnote 283:
-
- _S.P.D._, clxxv., 102, Nov. 25, 1630.
-
-A petition from the Master, Wardens and Assistants of the Company of
-Silk Throwers, shows that by this “Trade between Forty and Fifty
-thousand poor Men, Women and Children, are constantly Imployed and
-Relieved, in and about the City of _London_ ... divers unskilful
-Persons, who never were bred as Apprentices to the said Trade of
-_Silk-throwing_, have of _Late years_ intruded into the said Trade, and
-have Set up the same; and dwelling in Places beyond the Bounds and
-Circuit of the Petitioners Search by their Charter, do use Divers
-Deceits in the _Throwing_ and _Working_ of the Manufacture of Silk, to
-the great Wrong and Injury of the Commonwealth, and the great
-Discouragement of the Artists of the said Trade.”[284]
-
-Footnote 284:
-
- _Humble Petition of the Master, Wardens and Assistants of the Company
- of Silk Throwers._
-
-An act of Charles II. provided that men, women and children, if native
-subjects, though not apprentices, might be employed to turn the mill,
-tie threads, and double and wind silk, “as formerly.”[285]
-
-Footnote 285:
-
- Statutes 13 and 14, Charles II., c. 15.
-
-“There are here and there,” it was said, “a Silk Weaver or two (of late
-years) crept into some cities and Market Towns in _England_, who do
-employ such people that were never bound to the Trade ... in all other
-Trades that do employ the poor, they cannot effect their business
-without employing such as were never apprentice to the Trade ... the
-Clothier must employ the Spinner and Stock-carder, that peradventure
-were never apprentices to any trade, else they could never accomplish
-their end. And it is the same in making of Buttons and Bone-lace, and
-the like. But it is not so in this Trade; for they that have been
-apprentices to the Silk-weaving Trade, are able to make more commodities
-than can be easily disposed of ... because there hath not been for a
-long time any other but this, to place forth poor men’s Children, and
-Parish Boyes unto; by which means the poor of this Trade have been very
-numerous.”[286]
-
-Footnote 286:
-
- _Trade of England_, p. 18.
-
-During this period all the references to silk-spinning confirm the
-impression that it had become a pauper trade. A pamphlet calling for the
-imposition of a duty on the importation of wrought silks explains that
-“The Throwsters, by reason of this extraordinary Importation of raw
-Silk, will employ several hundred persons more than they did before, as
-Winders, Doublers, and others belonging to the throwing Trade, who for
-the greatest part are poor Seamen and Soldier’s wives, which by this
-Increase of Work will find a comfortable Subsistence for themselves and
-Families, and thereby take off a Burthen that now lies upon several
-Parishes, which are at a great charge for their Support.”[287] The
-“comfortable subsistence” of these poor seamen’s wives amounted to no
-more than 1s. 6d. or 1s. 8d. per week.[288]
-
-Footnote 287:
-
- _Answer to a Paper of Reflections, on the Project for laying a Duty on
- English Wrought Silks._
-
-Footnote 288:
-
- _Case of the Manufacturers of Gilt and Silver Wire_, 1714.
-
-There seems here no clue to explain the transition from a monopoly of
-gentlewomen conducting a profitable business on the lines of Family
-Industry to a disorganised Capitalistic Trade, resting on the basis of
-women’s sweated labour. The earlier monopoly was, however, probably
-favoured by the expensive nature of the materials used, and the
-necessity for keeping in touch with the merchants who imported them,
-while social customs secured an equitable distribution of the profits.
-With the destruction of these social customs and traditions, competition
-asserted its sway unchecked, till it appeared as though there might even
-be a relation between the costliness of the material and the
-wretchedness of the women employed in its manufacture; for the women who
-span gold and silver thread were in the same stage of misery.
-
-Formerly women had been mistresses in this class of business as well as
-in the Silk Trade, but a Proclamation of June 11th, 1622, forbade the
-exercise of the craft by all except members of the Company of Gold Wire
-Drawers.
-
-Under this proclamation the Silver thread of one Anne Twiseltor was
-confiscated by Thomas Stockwood, a constable, who entered her house and
-found her and others spinning gold and silver thread. “The said Anne
-being since married to one John Bagshawe hath arrested Stockwood for the
-said silver upon an action of £10, on the Saboth day going from Church,
-and still prosecuteth the suite against him in Guild Hall with much
-clamor.”[289] Bagshawe and his wife maintained that the silver was
-sterling, and therefore not contrary to the Proclamation. Stockwood
-refused to return it unless he might have some of it. Therefore they
-commenced the suit against him.
-
-Footnote 289:
-
- _C.R._, June 16, 1624.
-
-Probably few, if any, women became members of the Company of Gold Wire
-Drawers, and henceforward they were employed only as spinners. Their
-poverty is shown by the frequency with which they are mentioned as
-inmates of tenement houses, which through overcrowding became dangerous
-to the public health. It was reported to the Council for example, that
-Katherine Barnaby “entertayns in her house in Great Wood Streate, divers
-women kinde silver spinners.”[290]
-
-Footnote 290:
-
- _S.P.D._, ccclix., Returns to Council ... of houses, etc., 1637.
-
-These poor women worked in the spinning sheds of their masters, and thus
-the factory system prevailed already in this branch of the textile
-industry; the costliness of the fabrics produced forbade any great
-expansion of the trade, and therefore the Masters were not obliged to
-seek for labour outside the pauper class.
-
-The Curate, Churchwardens, Overseers and Vestrymen of the parish of St.
-Giles, Cripplegate, drew up the following statement: “There are in the
-said Parish, eighty five sheds for the spinning Gilt and Silver Thread,
-in which are 255 pair of wheels.”
-
- The Masters with their Families amount unto 581
-
- These imploy poor Parish-Boys and Girls to the 1275
- number of
-
- There are 118 master Wire-Drawers, who with their 826
- wives, Children and Apprentices, make
-
- Master weavers of Gold and Silver Lace and Fringes 106
-
- Their Wives, Children, Apprentices and Journey Men 2120
- amount unto
-
- Silver and Gold Bone-Lace makers, and Silver and 1000
- Gold Button makers with their Families
-
- Windsters, Flatters of Gold and Silver and Engine 300
- Spinners with their Families
-
- ────
-
- Total 6208
-
-They continue: “The Poor’s Rate of the Parish amounts to near Four
-Thousand Pounds per annum.... The Parish ... at this present are
-indebted One Thousand Six Hundred and Fifty Pounds. Persons are daily
-removing out of the Parish, by Reason of this heavy Burthen, empty
-Houses increasing. If a Duty be laid on the manufacture of Gold and
-Silver wyres the Poor must necessarily be increased.”[291]
-
-Footnote 291:
-
- _Case of the Parish of St. Giles, Cripplegate._
-
-Such a statement is in itself proof that Gold and Silver Thread making
-ranked among the pauper trades in which the wages paid must needs be
-supplemented out of the poor rates.
-
-
- E. CONCLUSION.
-
-IT has been shown that in textile industries all spinning was done
-exclusively by women and children, while they were also engaged to some
-extent in other processes, such as weaving, burling, bleaching, fulling,
-etc. The fact that the nation depended entirely upon women for the
-thread from which its clothing and household linen was made must be
-remembered in estimating their economic position. Even if no other work
-had fallen to their share, they can hardly have been regarded as mere
-dependants on their husbands when the clothing for the whole family was
-spun by their hands; but it has been explained in the previous chapter
-that in many cases the mother, in addition to spinning, provided a large
-proportion of the food consumed by her family. If the father earned
-enough money to pay the rent and a few other necessary expenses, the
-mother could and did, feed and clothe herself and her children by her
-own labours when she possessed enough capital to confine herself wholly
-to domestic industry. The value of a woman’s productive capacity to her
-family was, however, greatly reduced when, through poverty, she was
-obliged to work for wages, because then, far from being able to feed and
-clothe her family, her wages were barely adequate to feed herself.
-
-This fact indicates the weakness of women’s position in the labour
-market, into which they were being forced in increasing numbers by the
-capitalistic organisation of industry. In consequence of this weakness,
-a large proportion of the produce of a woman’s labour was diverted from
-her family to the profit of the capitalist or the consumer; except in
-the most skilled branches of the woollen industry, spinning was a pauper
-trade, a “sweated industry,” which did not provide its workers with the
-means for keeping themselves and their families in a state of
-efficiency, but left them to some extent dependent on other sources for
-their maintenance.
-
-Comparing the various branches of textile industry together, an
-interesting light is thrown upon the reactions between capitalistic
-organisation of labour and women’s economic position.
-
-Upper-class women had lost their unique position in the silk trade, and
-the wives of wealthy clothiers and wool-merchants appear to have seldom
-taken an active interest in business matters. Thus it was only as
-wage-earners that women were extensively employed in the textile trades.
-
-Their wages were lowest in the luxury trades i.e., silk, silver and
-gold, and in the linen trade. The former were now wholly capitalistic,
-but the demand for luxuries being limited and capable of little
-expansion, the labour available in the pauper classes was sufficient to
-satisfy it. The situation was different in the linen and allied trades,
-where the demand for thread, either of flax or hemp, appears generally
-to have been in excess of the supply. Although the larger part of the
-linen manufactured in England was still produced under the conditions of
-domestic industry, the demand for thread for trade purposes was steady
-enough to suggest to Parish Authorities the value of spinning as a means
-of reducing the poor rates. It did not occur to them, however, that if
-the wages paid for spinning were higher the poor would have been as
-eager to learn spinning as to gain apprenticeship in the skilled trades,
-and thus the problem of an adequate supply of yarn might have been
-solved at one stroke with the problem of poverty itself; no attempt was
-made to raise the wages, and the production of thread for trade purposes
-continued to be subsidised out of the poor rates. The consequent
-pauperisation of large numbers of women was a greater disaster than even
-the burthen of the poor rates. Instead of the independence and
-self-reliance which might have been secured through adequate wages,
-mothers were not only humiliated and degraded, but their physical
-efficiency and that of their children was lowered owing to the
-inadequacy of the grudging assistance given by the Churchwardens and
-Overseers.
-
-The woollen trade, in which capitalistic organisation had attained its
-largest development, presents a more favourable aspect as regards
-women’s wages. Already in the seventeenth century a spinster could earn
-sufficient money to maintain her individual self. In spite of periodic
-seasons of depression, the woollen trade was rapidly expanding; often
-the scope of the clothiers was limited by the quantity of yarn
-available, and so perforce they must seek for labour outside the pauper
-class. Possibly a rise was already taking place in the spinsters’ wages
-at the close of the century, and it is interesting to note that during
-this period the highest wages were earned, not by the women whose need
-for them was greatest, that is to say the women who had children
-depending exclusively on their wages, but rather by the well-to-do women
-who could afford to buy the wool for their spinning, and hold the yarn
-over till an advantageous opportunity arose for selling it.
-
-Spinning did not present itself to such women as a means of filling up
-vacant hours which they would otherwise have spent in idleness, but as
-an alternative to some other profitable occupation, so numerous were the
-opportunities offered to women for productive industry within the
-precincts of the home. Therefore to induce women of independent position
-to work for him, the Clothier was obliged to offer higher wages than
-would have been accepted by those whose children were suffering from
-hunger.
-
-Somewhat apart from economics and the rate of wages, is the influence
-which the developments of the woollen trade exercised on women’s social
-position, through the disintegration of the social organisation known as
-the village community. The English village had formed a social unit
-almost self-contained, embracing considerable varieties of wealth,
-culture and occupation, and finding self-expression in a public opinion
-which provided adequate sanction for its customs, and determined all the
-details of manners and morals. In the formation of this public opinion
-women took an active part.
-
-The seasons of depression in the Woollen Trade brought to such
-communities in the “Clothing Counties” a desolation which could only be
-rivalled by Pestilence or Famine. Work came to a standstill, and
-wholesale migrations followed. Many fathers left their starving
-families, in search of work elsewhere and were never heard of again. The
-traditions of family life and the customs which ruled the affairs of the
-village were lost, never to be again restored, and with them
-disappeared, to a great extent, the recognised importance of women in
-the life of the community.
-
-The social problems introduced by the wages system in its early days are
-described in a contemporary pamphlet. It must be remembered that the
-term “the poor” as used at this time signified the pauper class,
-hard-working, industrious families who were independent of charity or
-assistance from the poor rates being all included among the “common
-people.” “I cannot acknowledge,” the writer says, “that a Manufacture
-maketh fewer poor, but rather the contrary. For tho’ it sets the poor on
-work where it finds them, yet it draws still more to the place; and
-their Masters allow wages so mean, that they are only preserved from
-starving whilst they can work; when Age, Sickness, or Death comes,
-themselves, their wives or their children are most commonly left upon
-the Parish; which is the reason why those Towns (as in the _Weald of
-Kent_) whence the clothing is departed, have fewer poor than they had
-before.”[292]
-
-Footnote 292:
-
- _Reasons for a Limited Exportation of Wooll_, 1677.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER V
-
- CRAFTS AND TRADES.
-
-(A) _Crafts._ Influence of Gilds—Inclusion of women—Position of
-craftsman’s wife—Purposes of Gilds—The share of women in
-religious, social and trading privileges—Admission chiefly by
-marriage—Stationer’s Company—Carpenter’s Company—Rules of other
-Gilds and Companies—Apprenticeship to women—Exclusion of women did
-not originate in sex-jealousy—Position of women in open
-trades—Women’s trades.
-
-(B) _Retail Trades._ Want of technical training inclined women towards
-retailing—Impediments in their way—Apprenticeship of girls to
-shopkeepers—Prosecution of unauthorised traders—Street and market
-trading—Pedlars, Regraters, Badgers—Opposition of shopkeepers.
-
-(C) _Provision Trades._
-
- 1. _Bakers._ Never specially a woman’s trade—Widows—Share of
- married women.
-
- 2. _Millers._ Occasionally followed by women.
-
- 3. _Butchers._ Carried on by women as widows and by married
- women—also independently—Regrating.
-
- 4. _Fishwives._ Generally very poor.
-
- 5. _Brewers._ Originally a special women’s trade—Use of feminine
- form Brewster—Creation of monopoly—Exclusion of women by the
- trade when capitalised—retailing still largely in hands of
- women.
-
- 6. _Vintners._
-
-
-AGRICULTURE and the textile industries having been considered
-separately, owing to their importance and the very special conditions
-obtaining in both, the other forms of industry in which women were
-employed may be roughly divided into three classes, according to certain
-influences which made them more or less suitable for women’s
-employment.—(_a_) Skilled Trades. (_b_) Retail Trades. (_c_) Provision
-Trades.
-
-(_a_) _The Skilled Trades._ Most characteristic of the skilled trades
-are those crafts which became more or less highly organised and
-specialised by means of Gilds; though girls were seldom apprenticed to
-the gild trades, yet her marriage to a member of the Gild conferred upon
-a woman her husband’s rights and privileges; and as she retained these
-after his death, she could, as a widow, continue to control and direct
-the business which she inherited from her husband. In many trades the
-gild organisation broke down, and though the form of apprenticeship was
-retained its observance secured few, if any, privileges. Some skilled
-trades were chiefly if not wholly, in the hands of women, and these
-appear never to have been organised, though long apprenticeships were
-served by the girls who entered them.
-
-(_b_) _The Retail Trades._ The classification of retail trades as a
-group distinct from the Skilled Trades and the Provision Trades is
-somewhat arbitrary, because under the system of Family Industry, the
-maker of the goods was often his own salesman, or the middlemen who sold
-the goods to the consumers were themselves organised into gilds.
-Nevertheless, from the woman’s point of view retailing deserves separate
-consideration, because, whether as a branch of Family Industry or as a
-trade in itself, the employment of selling was so singularly adapted to
-the circumstances of women, that among their resources it may almost
-take rank with agriculture and spinning.
-
-(_c_) _The Provision Trades_ also, whether concerned with the production
-or only with the sale of Provisions, occupy a special position, because
-the provisioning of their households has been regarded from time
-immemorial as one of the elementary duties falling to the share of
-women, and it is interesting to note how far skill acquired by women in
-such domestic work was useful to them in trade.
-
-In all three classes of industry women were employed as their husbands’
-assistants or partners, but in the middle ages married women also
-engaged in business frequently on their own account. This was so usual
-that almost all the early Customs of the Boroughs enable a woman, when
-so trading, to go to law as though she were a femme sole, and provide
-that her husband shall not be responsible for her debts. For example,
-the Customs of the City of London declare that: “Where a woman coverte
-de baron follows any craft within the said city by herself apart, with
-which the husband in no way intermeddles, such woman shall be bound as a
-single woman in all that concerns her said craft. And if the wife shall
-plead as a single woman in a Court of Record, she shall have her law and
-other advantages by way of plea just as a single woman. And if she is
-condemned she shall be committed to prison until she shall have made
-satisfaction; and neither the husband nor his goods shall in such case
-be charged or interfered with. If a wife, as though a single woman,
-rents any house or shop within the said city, she shall be bound to pay
-the rent of the said house or shop, and shall be impleaded and sued as a
-single woman, by way of debt if necessary, notwithstanding that she was
-coverte de baron, at the time of such letting, supposing that the lessor
-did not know thereof.... Where plaint of debt is made against the
-husband, and the plaintiff declares that the husband made the contract
-with the plaintiff by the hand of the wife of such defendant, in such
-case the said defendant shall have the aid of his wife, and shall have a
-day until the next Court, for taking counsel with his wife.”[293]
-
-Footnote 293:
-
- _Liber Albus_, pp. 181-2. 1419.
-
-The Customal of the Town and Port of Sandwich provides that “if a woman
-who deals publickly in fish, fruit, cloth or the like, be sued to the
-amount of goods delivered to her, she ought to answer either with or
-without her husband, as the plaintiff pleases. But in every personal
-plea of trespass, she can neither recover nor plead against any body,
-without her husband. If she be not a public dealer, she cannot answer,
-being a covert baron.”[294] Similarly at Rye, “if any woman that is
-covert baron be impleaded in plea of debt, covenant broken, or chattels
-withheld, and she be known for sole merchant, she ought to answer
-without the presence of her baron.”[295]
-
-Footnote 294:
-
- Lyon. _Dover_, Vol. II., p. 295.
-
-Footnote 295:
-
- Lyon, _Dover_, Vol. II., p. 359.
-
-In Carlisle it was said that “where a wife that haith a husband use any
-craft wiᵗʰin this citie or the liberties of the same besides her husband
-crafte or occupation and that he mel not wᵗʰ her sayd craft this wife
-shalbe charged as woman sole. And if the husband and the wife be
-impledit in such case the wife shall plead as woman sole. And if she be
-condempned she shall goe to ward unto she haue mayd agrement. And the
-husband nor his guds shal not in this case be charged. And if the woman
-refuse to appeare and answere the husband or servand to bryng her in to
-answer.”[296]
-
-Footnote 296:
-
- Ferguson, _Carlisle_, p. 79; from _Dormont Book_.
-
-Though examples of the separate trading of women occur frequently in the
-seventeenth century, no doubt the more usual course was for her to
-assist her husband in his business. When this was transacted at home her
-knowledge of it was so intimate that she could successfully carry on the
-management during her husband’s absence. How complete was the reliance
-which men placed upon their wives under these circumstances is
-illustrated by the story of John Adams, a Quaker from Yorkshire, who
-took a long journey “in the service of Truth” to Holland and Germany. He
-describes how a fearful being visited him by night in a vision, telling
-him that he had been deceived, and not for the first time, in
-undertaking this service, and that all was in confusion at home. “The
-main reason why things are so is, thy wife, that used to be at the helm
-in thy business, is dead.” Thoroughly alarmed, he was preparing to hurry
-home when a letter arrived, saying that all was well, “whereby I was
-relieved in mind, and confirmed I was in my place, and that it was
-Satan, by his transformation, who had deceived and disturbed me.”[297]
-
-Footnote 297:
-
- _Irish Friend_, Vol. IV., p. 150.
-
-The understanding and good sense which enabled women to assume control
-during the temporary absence of their husbands, fitted them also to bear
-the burden alone when widowed. Her capacity was so much taken for
-granted that public opinion regarded the wife as being virtually her
-husband’s partner, leases or indentures were made out in their joint
-names, and on the husband’s death the wife was left in undisturbed
-possession of the stock, apprentices and goodwill of the business.
-
-
- A. _Skilled Trades or Crafts._
-
-The origin of the Craft Gilds is obscure. They were preceded by
-Religious Gilds in which men and women who were associated in certain
-trades united for religious and social purposes. Whether these Religious
-Gilds developed naturally into organisations concerned with the purpose
-of trade, or whether they were superseded by new associations whose
-first object was the regulation and improvement of the craft and with
-whom the religious and social ceremonies were of secondary importance is
-a disputed point, which, if elucidated, might throw some light on the
-industrial history of women. In the obscurity which envelopes this
-subject one certain fact emerges; the earlier Gilds included sisters as
-well as brothers, the two sexes being equally concerned with the
-religious and social observances which constituted their chief
-functions.
-
-As the Gilds become more definitely trade organisations the importance
-of the sisters diminishes, and in some, the Carpenters for example, they
-appear to be virtually excluded from membership though this exclusion is
-only tacitly arrived at by custom, and is not enforced by rules. In
-other Gilds, such as the Girdlers and Pewterers, it is evident that
-though women’s names do not occur in lists of wardens or assistants, yet
-they were actively engaged in these crafts and, like men, were subject
-to and protected by the regulations of their Gild or Company.
-
-Very little is yet known of the industrial position of Englishwomen in
-the middle ages. Poll-tax returns show, however, that they were engaged
-in many miscellaneous occupations. Thus the return for Oxford in 1380
-mentions six trades followed by women, viz.—37 spinsters, 11 shapesters
-(tailors), 9 tapsters (inn-keepers), 3 sutrices (shoemakers,) 3
-hucksters, 5 washerwomen, while in six others both men and women were
-employed, namely butchers, brewers, chandlers, ironmongers, netmakers
-and kempsters (wool-combers). 148 women were enrolled as ancillæ or
-servants, and 81 trades were followed by only men.
-
-A similar return for the West Riding of Yorks in 1379 declares the women
-employed in different trades to be as follows:—6 chapmen, 11 inn
-keepers, 1 farrier, 1 shoemaker, 2 nurses, 39 brewsters, 2 farmers, 1
-smith, 1 merchant, 114 domestic servants and farm labourers, 66
-websters, (30 with that surname), 2 listers or dyers, 2 fullers or
-walkers, and 22 seamstresses.[298] In every case these would be women
-who were carrying on their trade separately from their husbands, or as
-widows. During the following centuries women’s names are given in the
-returns made of the tradesmen working in different Boroughs, occurring
-sometimes in trades which would seem to modern ideas most unlikely for
-them. Thus 5 widows and 35 men’s names are given in a list of the smiths
-at Chester for the year 1574.[299]
-
-Footnote 298:
-
- By kind permission of Miss Eileen Power.
-
-Footnote 299:
-
- Harl. MSS., 2054. fo. 22., _The Smiths Book of Accts._ Chester, 1574.
-
-It must be remembered that, except those who are classed as servants,
-all grown-up women were either married or widows. It was quite usual for
-a married woman to carry on a separate business from her husband as sole
-merchant, but it was still more customary for her to share in his
-enterprise, and only after his death for the whole burden to fall upon
-her shoulders. How natural it was for a woman to regard herself as her
-husband’s partner will be seen when the conditions of family industry
-are considered. Before the encroachments of capitalism the members of
-the Craft Gilds were masters, not of other men, but of their craft. The
-workshop was part of the home, and in it, the master, who in the course
-of a long apprenticeship had acquired the technical mastery of his
-trade, worked with his apprentices, one or two journeymen and his wife
-and children. The number of journeymen and apprentices was strictly
-limited by the Gild rules; the men did not expect to remain permanently
-in the position of wage-earners, but hoped in course of time to marry
-and establish themselves as masters in their craft. Apart from the
-apprentices and journeymen no labour might be employed, except that of
-the master’s wife and children; but there are in every trade processes
-which do not require a long technical training for their performance,
-and thus the assistance of the mistress became important to her husband,
-whether she was skilled in the trade or not, for the work if not done by
-her must fall upon him. Sometimes her part was manual, but more often
-she appears to have taken charge of the financial side of the business,
-and is seen in the role of salesman, receiving payments for which her
-receipt was always accepted as valid, or even acting as buyer. In either
-case her services were so essential to the business that she usually
-engaged a servant for household matters, and was thus freed from the
-routine of domestic drudgery. Defoe, writing in the first decades of the
-eighteenth century, notes that “women servants are now so scarce that
-from thirty and forty shillings a Year, their Wages are increased of
-late to six, seven and eight pounds _per Annum_, and upwards ... an
-ordinary Tradesman cannot well keep one; but his Wife, who might be
-useful in his Shop, or Business, must do the Drudgery of Household
-Affairs; And all this, because our Servant Wenches are so puff’d up with
-Pride now-a-Days that they never think they go fine enough.”[300]
-
-Footnote 300:
-
- Defoe, _Everybody’s Business is No-Body’s Business_, p. 6, 1725.
-
-The position of a married woman in the tradesman class was far removed
-from that of her husband’s domestic servant. She was in very truth
-mistress of the household in that which related to trade as well as in
-domestic matters, and the more menial domestic duties were performed by
-young unmarried persons of either sex. To quote Defoe again, “it is but
-few Years ago, and in the Memory of many now living, that all the
-Apprentices of the Shopkeepers and Warehouse-keepers ... submitted to
-the most servile Employments of the Families in which they serv’d; such
-as the _young Gentry_, their Successors in the same Station, scorn so
-much as the Name of now; such as _cleaning_ their Masters’ Shoes,
-bringing _Water_ into the Houses from _the Conduits_ in the Street,
-which they carried on their Shoulders in long Vessels call’d Tankards;
-also waiting at Table, ... but their Masters are oblig’d to keep Porters
-or Footmen to wait upon the apprentices.”[301]
-
-Footnote 301:
-
- Defoe, _Behaviour of Servants_, p. 12, 1724.
-
-The rules of the early Gilds furnish abundant evidence that women then
-took an active part in their husbands’s trades; thus in 1297 the Craft
-of Fullers at Lincoln ordered that “none [of the craft] shall work at
-the wooden bar with a woman, unless with the wife of a master or her
-handmaid,”[302] and in 1372, when articles were drawn up for the
-Leather-sellers and Pouch-makers of London, and for Dyers serving those
-trades, the wives of the dyers of leather were sworn together with their
-husbands “to do their calling, and, to the best of their power,
-faithfully to observe the things in the said petition contained; namely
-John Blakthorne, and Agnes, his wife; John Whitynge, and Lucy, his wife;
-and Richard Westone, dier, and Katherine, his wife.”[303]
-
-Footnote 302:
-
- Smith (Toulmin), _English Gilds_, p. 180.
-
-Footnote 303:
-
- Riley (H. T.), _Memorials of London_, p. 365.
-
-The craft Gilds had either disappeared before the seventeenth century or
-had developed into Companies, wealthy corporations differing widely from
-the earlier associations of craftsmen. But though the Companies were
-capitalistic in their tendencies, they retained many traditions and
-customs which were characteristic of the Gilds. The master’s place of
-business was still in many instances within the precincts of his home,
-and when this was the case his wife retained her position as mistress.
-Incidental references often show the wife by her husband’s side in his
-shop. Thus Thomas Symonds, Stationer, when called as a witness to an
-inquest in 1514 describes how “within a quarter of an hower after VII. a
-clock in the morning, Charles Joseph came before him at his stall and
-said ‘good morow, goship Simondes,’ and the said Simonds said ‘good
-morow’ to hym againe, and the wife of the said Simons was by him, and
-because of the deadly countenance and hasty goinge of Charles, the said
-Thomas bad his wife looke whether Charles goeth, and as she could
-perceue, Charles went into an ale house.”[304]
-
-Footnote 304:
-
- Arber, _Stationers_, Vol. III., Intro., p. 19.
-
-Decker describes a craftsman’s household in “A Shoemaker’s Holiday.” The
-mistress goes in and out of the workshop, giving advice, whether it is
-wanted or not.
-
-_Firk_: “Mum, here comes my dame and my master. She’ll scold, on my
- life, for loitering this Monday; ...”
-
-_Hodge_: “Master, I hope you will not suffer my dame to take down your
- journeyman....”
-
-_Eyre_: “Peace, Firk; not I, Hodge; ... she shall not meddle with you
- ... away, queen of clubs; quarrel not with me and my men, with
- me and my fine Firk; I’ll firk you, if you do.”[305]
-
-Footnote 305:
-
- Decker (Thos.), _Best Plays_, p. 29.
-
-But the meddling continues to the end of the play.
-
-The same sort of scene is again described in “The Honest Whore,” where
-Viola, the Linen Draper’s wife, comes into his shop, and says to the two
-Prentices and George the servant, who are at work,
-
- “Come, you put up your wares in good order, here, do you not,
- think you? One piece cast this way, another that way! You had
- need have a patient master indeed.”
-
-_George replies_ (aside) “Ay, I’ll be sworn, for we have a curst
- mistress.”[306]
-
-Footnote 306:
-
- _Ibid._ p. 108.
-
-Comedy is concerned with the foibles of humanity, and so here the faults
-of the mistress are reflected, but in real life she is often alluded to
-as her husband’s invaluable lieutenant. There can be no doubt that
-admission to the world of business and the responsibilities which rested
-on their shoulders, often developed qualities in seventeenth century
-women which the narrower opportunities afforded them in modern society
-have left dormant. The wide knowledge of life acquired by close
-association with their husbands’ affairs, qualified mothers for the task
-of training their children; but it was not only the mother who benefited
-by the incorporation of business with domestic affairs, for while she
-shared her husband’s experiences he became acquainted with family life
-in a way which is impossible for men under modern conditions. The father
-was not separated from his children, but they played around him while he
-worked, and his spare moments could be devoted to their education. Thus
-the association of husband and wife brought to each a wider, deeper
-understanding of human life.
-
-Returning to the position of women in the Craft Gilds and the later
-Companies, it must be remembered that originally these associations had
-a three-fold purpose, (_a_) the performance of religious ceremonies,
-(_b_) social functions, (_c_) the protection of trade interests and the
-maintenance of a high standard of technical efficiency.
-
-Women are not excluded from membership by any of the earlier charters,
-which, in most cases expressly mention sisters as well as brothers, but
-references to them are more frequent in the provisions relating to the
-social and religious functions of the Gild than in those concerning
-technical matters. Though after the Reformation the performance of
-religious ceremonies fell into abeyance, social functions continued to
-be an important feature of the Companies.
-
-Entrance was obtained by apprenticeship, patrimony, redemption or, in
-the case of women, by marriage. The three former methods though open to
-women, were seldom used by them, and the vast majority of the sisters
-obtained their freedom through marriage. During the husband’s life time
-their position is not very evident, but on his death they were possessed
-of all his trade privileges. The extent to which widows availed
-themselves of these privileges varied in different trades, but custom
-appears always to have secured to the widow, rather than to the son, the
-possession of her husband’s business.
-
-Hitherto few records of the Gilds and Companies have been printed _in
-extenso_; possibly when others are published more light may be shed on
-the position which they accorded to women. The Stationers and the
-Carpenters are selected here, not because they are typical in their
-dealings with women, but merely because their records are available in a
-more complete form than the others.
-
-The Stationers’ Company included Stationers, Booksellers, Binders and
-Printers; apprenticeship to either of these trades conferred the right
-of freedom in the company, but the position of printer was a prize which
-could not be attained purely by apprenticeship; before the Long
-Parliament this privilege was confined to twenty-two Printing Houses
-only besides the Royal Printers, vacancies being filled up by the Court
-of Assistants, with the approval of the Archbishop of Canterbury. Any
-stationer who had been made free of his Company might publish books, but
-printing was strictly limited to these twenty-two houses. A vacancy
-seldom occurred, because, according to the old English custom, on the
-printer’s death his rights were retained by his widow, and in this
-Company they were not even alienated when she married again, but were
-shared by her second husband; thus a printer’s widow, whatever her age
-might be, was regarded as a most desirable “partie.” The widow Francis
-Simson married in succession Richard Read and George Elde, the business
-following her, and Anne Barton married a second, third and fourth
-time,[307] none of the later husbands being printers.
-
-Footnote 307:
-
- Arber, _Stationers_, Vol. V., Intro. xxix-xxx.
-
-Though amongst the printers the line of descent appears to have been
-more often from husband to wife and wife to husband than from father to
-son, a list, giving the names of the master printers as they succeeded
-each other from 1575 to 1635 shows that the business was acquired by
-marrying the printer’s widow, by purchase from her, and also by descent.
-Four women are mentioned:—William Ells bound to Mrs. East, a printer’s
-widow who, having left the trade many years was brought up in the art of
-printing by Mr. Fletcher upon composition. Mrs. Griffyn had two
-apprentices, Mrs. Dawson had three apprentices and Mrs. Purslow two
-apprentices.[308] Another list made in 1630 of the names of the Master
-Printers of London gives twenty-one men and three women, namely—Widdow
-Alde, Widdow Griffin, and “Widdow Sherleaker lives by printing of
-pictures.”[309] In 1634 the names of twenty-two printers are given,
-among whom are the following women—“Mr. William Jones succeeded Rafe
-Blore and paies a stipend to his wife ... neuer admitted.”
-
-Footnote 308:
-
- _S.P.D._, cccxiv., 127., Feb. 1636.
-
-Footnote 309:
-
- _Ibid._ clxxv., 45., Nov. 12, 1630.
-
-Mistris [ ] Alde, widdowe of Edward Alde [who] deceased about 10 yeeres
-since, (but she keepes her trade by her sonne who was Ra[lph] joyners
-sonne) neuer Admitted, neither capable of Admittance.
-
-Mistris [ ] Dawson widow of John Dawson deceased about a yeere since
-[he] succeeded his vnkle Thomas Dawson about 26 yeers since ... never
-admitted neither capeable, (she hath a sonne about 19 yeares old, bredd
-to ye trade).
-
-Mistris [ ] Pursloe widdow of George Pursloe who succeeded Simon
-Stafford about 5 yeeres since [she was] never admitted neither capeable.
-(haviland, Yo[u]ng and fletcher haue this.)
-
-Mistris [ ] Griffin widdow of Edward Griffin [who] succeeded Master
-[Melchisedeck] Bradwood about 18 yeeres since [she was] never admitted
-neither capable. (she hath a sonne.) (haviland, Yo[u]ng and fletcher
-have this yet).[310]
-
-Footnote 310:
-
- Arber, _Transcript_, Vol. III., add, 701.
-
-Men as well as women in the list are noted as “never admitted neither
-capable of admittance.”
-
-Whether these women took an active part in the management of the
-business which they thus acquired or whether they merely drew the
-profits, leaving the management to others, is not clear. From the notes
-to the above list it would appear that they often followed the latter
-course, but elsewhere women are mentioned who are evidently taking an
-active part in the printing business. For example, an entry in the
-Stationers Register states at a time when Marsh and Vautrollier had the
-sole printing of school books “It is agreed that Thomas Vautrollier his
-wife shall finish this present impression which shee is in hand withall
-in her husband’s absence, of Tullie’s Epistles with Lambini’s
-annotations.”[311]
-
-Footnote 311:
-
- Stopes (Mrs. C. C.) _Shakespeare’s Warwickshire Contemporaries_, p. 7.
-
-After his death Vautrollier’s widow printed one book but immediately
-after, on March 4th, 1587-8, the Court of Assistants ordered that “Mrs.
-Vautrollier, late wife of Thomas Vautrollier deceased, shall not
-hereafter print any manner of book or books whatsoever, as well by
-reason that her husband was noe printer at the time of his decease, as
-alsoe by the decrees sette downe in the Starre Chamber she is debarred
-from the same.” This order is inexplicable, as other printers’ widows
-exercised their husbands’ business, and Thomas Vautrollier’s name is
-duly given in the order of succession from Master Printers. Possibly the
-business had been transferred to her daughter, who married Field, their
-apprentice. Field died in 1625, his widow continuing the business.[312]
-
-Footnote 312:
-
- _Ibid._, p. 8. (Some authorities state that Field married the widow,
- others the daughter of Vautrollier.)
-
-Among thirty-nine printing patents issued by James I. and Charles II. is
-one to “Hester Ogden, als ffulke Henr. Sibbald _et_ Tho. Kenithorpe for
-printing a book called The Sincire and True Translation of the Holy
-Scripture into the Englishe tounge.” It appears as though Hester Ogden
-was no mere figure head, for His Majesty’s Printers appealed against
-this licence on the grounds that it infringed their rights, protesting
-that “Mistris Ogden a maried woman one of Dr. Fulkes daughters did
-lately [sue] his Majestie to haue ye printing of her fathers workes,
-which his [Majestie] not knowing ye premises granted, and ye same being
-first referred [to the] Archbishop of Canterbury ... their lordships ...
-deliuered their opinion against her, since which she hath gotten a new
-reference to the Lord Chancellor and Master Secretary Nanton, who not
-examining yᵉ title vpon oath and the Stationers being not then able to
-produce those materiall proofes which now they can their honors
-certified for her, wherevpon her friends hath his Majestie’s grant for
-ye printing and selling of the sayed book for xxi. years to her vse....
-Mistris Ogden hath gotten by begging from ye clergy and others diuers
-great somes of money towards ye printing of her fathers workes. Master
-Norton and myself haue for many £1000 bought ye office of his Majesties
-printer to which ye printing of ye translacons of the Bible or any parts
-thereof sett furth by the State belongs. Now the greatest parte of Dr.
-Fulkes worke is the new testament in English sett forth by
-authoritie.”[313]
-
-Footnote 313:
-
- Arber, _Transcript_, Vol. III., p. 39.
-
-Another patent was granted to Helen Mason for “printing and selling the
-abridgment of the book of martyres,”[314] while Jane, wife of Sir Thomas
-Bludder, petitions Archbishop Laud, showing that “She with John Bill an
-infant have by grant from the King the moiety of the office of King’s
-Printer and amongst other things the printing of Bibles. This is
-infringed by a printer in Scotland, who printed many Bibles there and
-imported them into England ... she prays the Archbishop to hear the case
-himself.”[315]
-
-Footnote 314:
-
- Arber, _Transcript_, Vol. V., lviii.
-
-Footnote 315:
-
- _S.P.D._, cccxxxix., p. 89.
-
-Many of the books printed at this time bear the names of women
-printers,[316] but though women might own and direct the printing
-houses, there is no indication that they were ever engaged in the manual
-processes of printing. The printers’ trade does in fact furnish rather a
-good example of the effect upon women’s economic position of the
-transition from family industry to capitalistic organisation. It is true
-that many links in the evolution must be supplied by the imagination. We
-can imagine the master printer with his press, working at home with the
-help of his apprentice, his wife and children; then as his trade
-prospered he employed journeymen printers who were the real craftsmen,
-and it became possible for the owner of the business to be a man or
-woman who had never been bred up to the trade.
-
-Footnote 316:
-
- e.g. _An Essay of Drapery_ ... by William Scott, printed by Eliz. Alde
- for S. Pennell, London, 1635. Calvin, _Institution of Christian
- Religion_. Printed by the widowe of R. Wolfe, London, 1574. The
- fourthe edition of _Porta Linguarum_ is printed by E. Griffin for M.
- Sparke. London, 1639.
-
-Apprenticeship was still exacted for the journeymen. A Star Chamber
-decree in 1637 provides that no “master printer shall imploy either to
-worke at the Case, or the Presse, or otherwise about his printing, any
-other person or persons, then such only as are Freemen, or Apprentices
-to the Trade or mystery of Printing.”[317] While in 1676 the Stationers’
-Company ordained that “no master-printer, or other printer or workman
-... shall teach, direct or instruct any person or persons whatsoever,
-other than his or their own legitimate son or sons, in this Art or
-Mystery of Printing, who is not actually bound as an Apprentice to some
-lawful authorised Printer.”[318]
-
-Footnote 317:
-
- Arber, _Transcript_, Vol. IV., p. 534.
-
-Footnote 318:
-
- _Ibid._ Vol. I., p. 16.
-
-From the omission here of any mention of daughters it is clear that the
-Master Printers’ women-folk did not concern themselves with the
-technical side of his trade; but some attempt was evidently made to use
-other girls in the unskilled processes, for on a petition being
-presented in 1635 by the younger printers, concerning abuses which they
-wished removed, the Stationers’ Company adopted the following
-recommendation, “That no Master Printer shall hereafter permit or suffer
-by themselves or their journeyman any Girles, Boyes, or others to take
-off anie sheets from the tinpin of the presse, but hee that pulleth at
-the presse shall take off every sheete himself.”[319]
-
-Footnote 319:
-
- _S.P.D._, ccci., 105, Nov. 16, 1635.
-
-The young printers were successful in their efforts to preserve the
-monopoly value of their position, and formed an organisation amongst
-themselves to protect their interests against the masters; but in this
-association the wives of the young printers found no place. They could
-no longer help their husbands who were working, not at home, but on the
-master’s premises; and as girls were not usually apprenticed to the
-printing trade women were now virtually excluded from it.
-
-Some imagination is needed to realise the social results of the change
-thus effected by capitalistic organisation on the economic position of
-married women, for no details have been discovered of the printers’
-domestic circumstances; but as the wife was clearly unable to occupy
-herself with her husband’s trade, neither she nor her daughters could
-share the economic privileges which he won for himself and his fellows
-by his organising ability. If his wages were sufficiently high for her
-to devote herself to household affairs, she became his unpaid domestic
-servant, depending entirely on his goodwill for the living of herself
-and her children; otherwise she must have conducted a business on her
-own account, or obtained work as a wage-earner, in neither case
-receiving any protection from her husband in the competition of the
-labour market.
-
-The wives and widows of the Masters were meanwhile actively engaged in
-other branches of the Stationers’ Company. In a list of Publishers
-covering the years 1553-1640, nearly ten per cent. of the names given
-are those of women, probably all of whom were widows.[320] One of these,
-the widow of Francis Coldock, married in 1603 Isaac Binge, the Master of
-the Company. “She had three husbands, all Bachelors and Stationers, and
-died 1616, and is buried in St. Andrew Undershaft in a vault with Symon
-Burton her father.”[321] The names of these women can be found also in
-the books they published. For example “The True Watch and Rule of Life”
-by John Brinsley the elder, printed by H. Lownes for Joyce Macham, _7th
-ed._ 1615, the eighth edition being printed for her by T. Beale in 1619,
-and “an Epistle ... upon the present pestilence” by Henoch Clapham, was
-printed by T.C. for the Widow Newbery, London, 1603. A woman who was a
-Binder is referred to in an order made by the Bishop of London in 1685
-“to damask ... counterfeit Primmirs’ seized at Mrs. Harris’s
-Binder,”[322] and Women are also met with as booksellers. Anne Bowler
-sold the book “Catoes Morall Distichs” ... printed by Annes Griffin. The
-Quakers at Horsley Down paid to Eliz. ffoulkes 3s. for their minute
-book,[323] while Pepys’ bookseller was a certain Mrs. Nicholls.[324] The
-death of Edward Croft, Bookseller, is recorded in Smyth’s _Obituary_,
-“his relict, remarried since to Mr. Blagrave, an honest bookseller, who
-live hapily in her house in Little Britain.”[325]
-
-Footnote 320:
-
- Arber, _Transcript_, Vol. V., p. lxxxi-cxi.
-
-Footnote 321:
-
- _Ibid._, Vol. V., p. lxiii.
-
-Footnote 322:
-
- Arber, _Transcript_, Vol. V., p. lv.
-
-Footnote 323:
-
- Monthly Meeting Minutes. Horsleydown, 13 iᵐᵒ 167⅞.
-
-Footnote 324:
-
- Pepys, _Diary_, Vol. I., p. 26.
-
-Footnote 325:
-
- Smyth’s _Obituary_, P. 77.
-
-The trade of a bookseller was followed by women in the provinces as well
-as in London, the Howards paying “For books bought of Eliz. Sturton
-iijs.”[326] and Sir John Foulis enters in his account book “To Ard.
-Hissops relict and hir husband for 3 paper bookes at 10 gr. p. peice and
-binding other 4 bookes, 18. 14. 0 [Scots money], to them for a gramer
-and a salust to the bairns, 1.2.0. She owes me 6/8. of change.”[327]
-
-Footnote 326:
-
- Howard, _Household Books_, p.161, 1622.
-
-Footnote 327:
-
- Foulis, Sir John, _Acct. Book_, p. 22, 1680.
-
-Presumably all the women who were engaged in either of these allied
-trades in London were free of the Stationers’ Company, and in most cases
-they were widows. Many apprentices were made free on the testimony of a
-woman,[328] and though these in some cases may have almost completed
-their servitude before the death of their master, “Mistris Woolff” gives
-testimony for one apprentice in 1601, and for another in 1603, showing
-that she at least continued the management of her husband’s business for
-some years, and as she received a new apprentice during this time,[329]
-it is evident that she had no intention of relinquishing it.
-
-Footnote 328:
-
- “Mistres Gosson. Stephan Coxe, Sworne and Admytted a Freeman of this
- Companie iijs, iiijid. Note that master Warden White Dothe Reporte,
- for mistres Gosson’s Consent to the makinge of this prentice free.
- (Arbers, _Transcript_, Vol. II., p. 727, 1600.) Alice Gosson Late wyfe
- of Thomas Gosson. Henry Gosson sworne and admitted A ffreeman of this
- company per patrimonium iijs. iiijid. (_Ibid._ p. 730, 1601.) Mistres
- Woolff. John Barnes sworne and admitted A freeman (_Ibid._ p. 730,
- 1601.) Jane proctor, Wydowe of William proctor. Humfrey Lympenny
- sworne and admitted A ffreeman of this Companye iijs. iiijd, (_Ibid._
- p. 730, 1601.) Mystris Conneway Nicholas Davyes sworn and admitted A
- freeman of this company per patrimonium iijs. iiijid. (_Ibid._ p. 732,
- 1602.)”
-
-Footnote 329:
-
- Johne Adams of London (stationer’s son) apprenticed to Alice Woolff of
- citie of London widowe for 8 years 2s. 6d. (Arber, _Transcript_, Vol.
- II., p. 253, 1601.) Other instances of apprentices being bound to
- women occur as for example “Wm. Walle apprenticed to Elizabeth Hawes
- Widow for 8 years,” (_Ibid._, Vol. II., p. 287, 1604.) “Thomas
- Richardson of York apprenticed to Alice Gosson, of citie of London
- wydowe for 7 years, 2s. 6d.” (_Ibid._, Vol. II., p. 249, 1600).
-
-When on her husband’s death the widow transferred an apprentice to some
-other master we may infer that she felt unable to take the charge of
-business upon her. This happened not infrequently, “Robert Jackson late
-apprentise with Raffe Jackson is putt ouer by consent of his mystres
-unto master Burby to serve out the Residue of his terms of apprentishood
-with him, the Last yere excepted.... Anthony Tomson ... hath putt him
-self an apprentice to master Gregorie Seton ... for 8 yeres.... Eliz.
-Hawes shall haue the services and benefit of this Apprentise during her
-wydohed or marrying one of the Company capable of him.”[330] “John
-leonard apprentise to Edmond Bolifant deceased is putt ouer by the
-consent of the said mary Bolyfant unto Richard Bradocke ... to serue out
-the residue of his apprentiship.”[331] But whether the widow wished to
-continue the business as a “going concern” or not, she, and she only,
-was in possession of the privileges connected therewith, for she was
-virtually her husband’s partner, and his death did not disturb her
-possession. The old rule of copyright recognised her position, providing
-“that copies peculiar for life to any person should not be granted to
-any other but the Widow of the deceased”, she certifying the title of
-the book to the Master and Wardens, and entering the book in the “bookes
-of thys Company.”[332]
-
-Footnote 330:
-
- _Ibid._, p. 260, 1602.
-
-Footnote 331:
-
- _Ibid._, p. 262, 1602.
-
-Footnote 332:
-
- Arber _Transcript_, Vol. V., p. 11, 1560.
-
-The history of the Carpenters’ Company resembles that of the Stationers’
-in some respects, though the character of a carpenter’s employment,
-which was so often concerned with building operations, carried on away
-from his shop, did not favour the continuance of his wife in the
-business after his death. The “Boke” of the ordinances of the
-Brotherhood of the Carpenters of London, dated 1333, shows the Society
-to have been at that time a Brotherhood formed “of good men carpenters
-of men and women” for common religious observances and mutual help in
-poverty and sickness, partaking of the nature of a Benefit Society
-rather than a Trade Union. The Brotherhood was at the same time a
-Sisterhood, and Brethren and Sisters are mentioned together in all but
-two of its articles. In the later code of ordinances, of which a copy
-has been preserved dated 1487, sisters are but twice mentioned, when
-tapers are prescribed at the burying of their bodies and prayers for the
-resting of their souls.[333] Women’s names seldom occur in the Records,
-apart from entries connected with those who were tenants, or charitable
-grants to widows fallen into poverty, or with payments to the Bedell’s
-wife for washing tablecloths and napkins.[334] In one instance
-considerable trouble was experienced because the Bedell’s wife would not
-turn out of their house after the Bedell’s death. In September, 1567,
-“it is agreed and fullie determyned by the Mʳ wardeins & assystaunce of
-this company that Syslie burdon wydowe late wife of Richard burdon
-dwelling wᵗʰin this house at the will & pleasure of the foresaid Mʳ &
-wardeins shall quyetlye & peaceablye dept out of & from her now
-dwellinge at Xpistmas next or before & at her departure to have the some
-of Twentie six shillinges & eight pence of Lawfull money of England in
-reward.”[335] Syslie Burdon however did not wish to move, and in the
-following February another entry occurs “at this courte it is agreed
-further that Cysley burdon wydowe at the feast daye of thannunciacon of
-oʳ Ladie Sᵗ marye the virgin next ensueng the date abovesayd shall dept.
-& goe from her nowe dwellinge house wherein she now dwelleth wᵗʰ in this
-hall & at the same tyme shall have at her deptur if she doethe of her
-owne voyd wᵗʰout anye further troublynge of the Mʳ and wardeins of this
-house at that p’sent tyme the some of Twentie six shillinges eightpense
-in reward.”[336] Cyslie Burdon may have believed that as a widow she had
-a just claim to the house, for leases granted by the Company at this
-time were usually for the life of the tenant and his wife.[337]
-
-Footnote 333:
-
- _Records of the Worshipful Company of Carpenters_, Vol. II., Intro.,
- p. ix.
-
-Footnote 334:
-
- For example “Itm payd to the bedells wyffe for kepyng of the gardyn
- vijs.” _Ibid._ Vol. IV., p. 2. _Warden’s Acct. Book_, 1546. She had
- besides iiijs. “for her hole yeres wasschyng the clothes” (p. 11) and
- iiijid. “for skoryng of the vessell,” (p. 13) this payment was later
- increased to xijid. and she had “for bromes for Oʳ Hall every quarter
- a jid.” (p. 33) in Reward for her attendance ijs, (p. 114). Burdons
- wyffe for dressing your dinner xiiijid. (p. 129).
-
-Footnote 335:
-
- _Records of the Worshipful Company of Carpenters_, Vol. III., _Court
- Book_, p. 97.
-
-Footnote 336:
-
- _Ibid._ p. 103.
-
-Footnote 337:
-
- _Ibid._ Vol. III., pp. 10-11, March 15, 1544-5. “agreyed and
- codyssendyd thatt frances pope and hys wyffe schall have and hold a
- gardyn plott lyeng be oure hall in the prysche of alhallouns at london
- Wall for the tyme of the longer lever of them bothe payeing viijs: be
- the yere ... the sayd [ ]pope nor hys wyffe schall not take dowene no
- palles nor pale postes nor Raylles In the garden nor no tres nor
- bussches schall nott plucke upe be the Rootes nor cutte theme downe
- nor no maner of erbys ... wᵗowt the lycens of the Master and Wardyns
- of the mystery of Carpenters” Aug. 10, 1564, “agreed and condissendid
- that Robart masckall and Elyzabeth his wiffe shall have and hold the
- Howse which He now occupieth duryng his lyffe and after the deseese of
- the said Robart to Remayne to Elizabeth his wyffe duryng her wyddohed
- paying yerlye xls of lawfull mony of England” etc., _Ibid._ Vol. III.,
- p. 78.
-
-Women accompanied their husbands to the Company dinners as a matter of
-course. In 1556 “the clothyng” are ordered to pay for “ther dynner at
-the Dynner day ijs. vjid. a man whether ther wyffes or they themselves
-come or no.”[338] But the entries do not suggest that the position of
-equal sisters which they held in the days of the old “Boke” was
-maintained. Women made presents to the Company. “Mistrys ellis,” the
-wife of one of the masters of the Company, presented “a sylv̄ pott ꝑsell
-gylt the q̄ter daye at candylmas wayeing viij ozes & a qter.”[339] This
-apparently was in memory of her deceased husband, for in the same year
-she “turned over” an apprentice, and in 1564 a fine was paid by Richard
-Smarte “for not comyng at yᵉ owre appoynted to mistris Ellis
-beriall—xijid.”[340] Neither the existence of these two instances, which
-show a lively interest in the Company, nor the absence of other
-references can be taken as conclusive evidence one way or another
-concerning the social position of the sisters in the Company. Among the
-many judgments passed on brothers for reviling each other, using
-“ondecent words,” etc., etc., only once is a woman fined for this
-offence, when in 1556 the warden enters in his account book “Resd of
-frances stelecrag a fyne for yll wordes that his wyffe gave to John
-Dorrant ijˢ—Resd of John Dorrant for yll wordes that he gave to Mystris
-frances xvjᵈ—Resd of Wyllam Mortym̃ a fyne for callyng of Mystris
-frances best ijˢ.”[341]
-
-Footnote 338:
-
- _Records of Worshipful Company of Carpenters_, Vol. III., p. 58.
-
-Footnote 339:
-
- _Ibid._ Vol. IV., p. 99, _Wardens Acct. Book_, 1558.
-
-Footnote 340:
-
- In 1563 xxs. was “Resd of Wyllym barnewell at yᵉ buryall of his wiffe
- yᵗ she dyd wyll to be gyven to yᵉ Cōpany.” (_Ibid._ Vol. IV., p. 147)
- “Payd at the buryall of barnewell’s wyffe at yᵉ kyges hedd. xiiijs.
- iiijid. Paid to the bedle for Redyng of yᵉ wyll viijid.” (_Ibid._ Vol.
- IV., p. 149.)
-
-Footnote 341:
-
- _Ibid._ Vol. IV., p. 84.
-
-It is certain that the wives of carpenters, like the wives of other
-tradesmen, shared the business anxieties of their husbands, the help
-they rendered being most often in buying and selling. This activity is
-reflected in some rules drawn up to regulate the purchase of timber. In
-1554 “yᵗ was agreyd be the Master & wardyns and the moste parte of the
-assestens that no woman shall come to the waters to by tymber bourde
-lath q̄ters ponchons gystes & Raffters ther husbandes beyng in the town
-uppon payne to forfyt at ëvry tyme so fownd.”[342] The Company’s
-decision was not readily obeyed, for on March 8th, 1547, “the Master and
-the Wardyns wᵗ partt of the Assestens went to the gyldehall to have had
-a Redresse for the women that came to the watersyde to by stuffe,”[343]
-and on March 10th “was called in John Armestrong, Wyllyam boner, Wyllyam
-Watson, John Gryffyn and Henry Wrest there having amonyssion to warne
-ther wyffes that they schulde not by no stuffe at the waters syd upone
-payne of a fyne.”[344]
-
-Footnote 342:
-
- _Records of Worshipful Company of Carpenters_, Vol. III., p. 15,
- _Court Book_.
-
-Footnote 343:
-
- _Ibid._ Vol. III., p. 30.
-
-Footnote 344:
-
- _Ibid._ Vol. III., p. 31.
-
-On her husband’s death the carpenter’s wife generally retired from
-business, transferring her apprentices for a consideration to another
-master. That this practice was not universal is shown in the case of a
-boy who had been apprenticed to Joseph Hutchinson and was “turned over
-to Anne Hayward, widow, relict of Richard Hayward Carpentar.”[345] Mrs.
-Hayward must clearly have been actively prosecuting her late husband’s
-business. The women who “make free” apprentices seem generally to have
-done so within a few months of their husband’s deaths. That the Company
-recognised the right of women to retain apprentices if they chose is
-shown by the following provision in Statutes dated November 10th, 1607.
-“If any Apprentice or Apprentices Marry or Absent themselves from their
-Master or Mistress During their Apprenticehood, then within one month
-the Master or Mistress is to Bring their Indentures to the hall to be
-Registered and Entered, etc.” “None to Receive or take into their
-service or house any Man or Woman’s Apprentice Covenant Servant or
-Journeyman within the limits aforesaid, etc.”[346]
-
-Footnote 345:
-
- _Ibid._ Vol. I., p. 136.
-
-Footnote 346:
-
- _Records of the Worshipful Company of Carpenters_, Vol. I., Intro.
- vii-viii.
-
-When a carpenter’s widow could keep her husband’s business together, no
-one disputed her right to receive apprentices. Several instances of
-their doing so are recorded towards the end of the century.[347] The
-right to succeed her husband in his position as carpenter and member of
-the worshipful company was immediately allowed when claimed by a widow;
-thus the court “agreed ... that Johan burton wydowe late wife of [ ]
-burton citezein and Carpenter of London for that warninge hathe not ben
-goven unto her from tyme to tyme at the Quarterdaies heretofore From
-henseforthe shall have due warninge goven unto her everye Quarterdaye
-and at the next Quarterdaie she shall paye in discharge of tharrerages
-behind Twelve pence & so shall paye her Quateridge (pᵈ xijid.)”[348]; a
-year later “burtons widow” makes free an apprentice Mighell
-Pattinson.[349]
-
-Footnote 347:
-
- _Ibid._ p. 137, May 2, 1671. Richardus Read filius Thome Read de Chart
- Magna in Com. Kanc. Shoemaker po: se appren Josepho Hutchinson Bedello
- Hujus Societat pro Septem Ann a die dat Indre Dat die et ann ult pred
- (Assign immediate Susanne Catlin vid nuper uxor. Johannis Catlin nuper
- Civis et Carpenter London defunct uten etc).
-
- _Ibid._ p. 153. Dec. 5, 1676. Johannes Keyes filius Willi. Keyes nuper
- de Hampsted in Com. Middx. Milwright ed Elizabetham Davis vid. willi
- Davis nuper Civi & Carpentar de London a die date pred etc (sic).
-
- _Ibid._ p. 158. July 1, 1679. Samuell Goodfellow filius Johanni of
- Rowell in Com. Northton Corwayner pon se Martha Wildey relict of
- Robert pro septem annis a dat etc.
-
- _Ibid._ p. 161. Ap. 5, 1681. Georg Thomas filius Thome nuper de
- Carlyon in Com Monmouth gent pon se Apprenticum Elizabeth Whitehorne
- of Aldermanbury vid. Johis. pro septem Annis a dat.
-
- _Ibid._ p. 164. Oct. 4, 1681. Richard Lynn sonn of William Lynn decd.
- pon se Apprenticum Marie Lynn widdow Relict of the said William C: C:
- pro septem annis a dat.
-
- _Ibid._ p. 165. March 7, 1681-2. John Whitehorne son of John
- Whitehorne C: C: Ld, pon se apprenticum Elizabethe Relict. ejusdem
- Joh’s Whitehorne pro septem annis a dat.
-
- _Ibid._ p. 171. Apr. 5, 1686. Richard Sᵗevenson sonne of Robᵗ
- Stevenson late of Dublin in the Kingedome of Ireland Pavier bound to
- Anne Nicholson Widowe the Relict of Anthony Nicholson, for eight
- yeares.
-
- _Ibid._ p. 189. June 7, 1692. Robert Harper sonne of William Harper of
- Notchford in the county of Chesheire, bound to Abigail Taylor for
- Seaven Yeares.
-
-Curiously enough, during the period 1654 to 1670, twenty-one girls were
-bound apprentice at Carpenters’ Hall. Probably none of these expected to
-learn the trade of a carpenter.[350] Nine were apprenticed to Richard
-Hill and his wife, who lived first near St. Michael’s, Cornehill,[351]
-and afterwards against Trinity Minories.[352] They were apprenticed for
-seven years to learn the trade of a sempstress, and probably in each
-case a heavy premium was paid, a note being made against the name of
-Prudentia Cooper, who was bound in 1664 “(obligatur Pater in 50ˡ pro
-ventute apprenticij).”[353]
-
-Footnote 348:
-
- _Records of Worshipful Company of Carpenters_, Vol. III., p. 102,
- _Court Book_, 1567.
-
-Footnote 349:
-
- _Ibid._ Vol. III., p. 200.
-
-Footnote 350:
-
- _Ibid._ Vol. I., Intro. p. x-xi. Apprentice Entry Book.
-
-Footnote 351:
-
- _Ibid._ Vol. I., p. 62.
-
-Footnote 352:
-
- _Ibid._ Vol. I., p. 125.
-
-Footnote 353:
-
- _Ibid._ Vol. I., p. 78.
-
-Richard Hill’s wife’s name is included in the Indentures three times,
-and in 1672 a boy was apprenticed to “Ric. Hill Civi _et_ Carpenter
-London necnon de little Minories Silk Winder.”[354] We may infer that
-Mrs. Hill had founded the business before or after her marriage with the
-carpenter, and that hers proving profitable the husband had been
-satisfied with working for wages, while retaining the freedom of the
-Company, or had transferred his services to his wife’s business, adding
-that of a Silk winder to it. One girl originally apprenticed to Henry
-Joyse was “turned over to Anne Joyse sempstress & sole merchant without
-Thomas Joyse her husband,”[355] five were apprenticed to Henry Joyce to
-learn the trade of a milliner. No mention is made of his wife, but as he
-received boy apprentices also,[356] it may be supposed that in fact the
-two trades of a carpenter and a milliner were carried on in this case
-simultaneously by him and his wife. The blending of these two trades is
-noted again in the case of Samuel Joyce;[357] the trade the other girls
-were to learn is not generally specified, but Rebecca Perry was
-definitely apprenticed to William Addington “to learne the Art of a
-Sempstress of his wife.”[358] Two girls were apprenticed to “Thome
-Clarke ... London Civi et Carpenter ad discend artem de Child’s Coate
-seller existen. art. uxoris sue pro septem annis.”[359]
-
-Footnote 354:
-
- _Ibid._ Vol. I., p. 145.
-
-Footnote 355:
-
- _Ibid._ Vol. I., p. 136.
-
-Footnote 356:
-
- _Records of the Worshipful Company of Carpenters_, Vol. I., p. 65,
- e.g. Brewin Radford (obligatur Maria Radford de Perpole in Com Dorsett
- vid. in 100ˡ pro ventut apprentice).
-
-Footnote 357:
-
- _Ibid._ Vol. I., p. 149, 1674. “Edmundus Wilstead filius Henrici
- Wilstead de Thetford in Com Norfolcie yeoman po: se appren. Samueli
- Joyse Civi et Carpenter London necnon de Exambia Regali London miliner
- pro septem annis” etc.
-
-Footnote 358:
-
- _Ibid._ Vol. I., p. 162.
-
-Footnote 359:
-
- _Ibid._ Vol. I., p. 148.
-
-Elizabeth Lambert, the daughter of Thomas Lambert, formerly of London,
-silkeman, was apprenticed in 1678 to Rebecca Cooper, widow of Thomas
-Cooper, “Civis Carpenter London,” for seven years.[360] Another girl who
-had been apprenticed to this same woman in 1668 applied for her freedom
-in 1679, which was granted, though apparently her request was an unusual
-one, the records stating that “Certaine Indentures of Apprentiship were
-made whereby Rebecca Gyles, daughter of James Gyles of Staines, ... was
-bound Apprentice to Rebecca Cooper of the parish of St. Buttolph without
-Aldgate widdow for seaven yeares ... this day att a Court of assistants
-then holden for this Company came Rebecca Gylles Spinster sometime
-servant to Rebecca Cooper a free servant of this Company, and complained
-that haveing served her said Mistres faithfully a Terme of seaven years
-whᶜʰ expired the twenty-fourth day of June, 1675, and often desired of
-her said Mistris Testimony of her service to the end shee might bee made
-free, her said Mistres had hitherto denyed the same; & then presented
-credible persons within this Citty to testifie the truth of her said
-service, desireing to bee admitted to the freedome of this Company,
-which this Table thought reasonable, vnlesse the said Rebecca Cooper,
-her said Mistres on notice hereof to bee given, shall shew reasonable
-cause to the contrary, etc.”[361] Encouraged by the success of this
-application, two other girls followed Rebecca Gyles’ example, one being
-presented for her freedom at Carpenters’ Hall by Thomas Clarke in 1683
-and another by Henry Curtis in 1684.[362]
-
-Footnote 360:
-
- _Ibid._ Vol. I., p. 156.
-
-Footnote 361:
-
- Jupp, _Carpenters_, p. 161, 1679.
-
-Footnote 362:
-
- _Records of Worshipful Company of Carpenters_, Vol. I., p. 198.
-
-Thus it may be presumed that apprenticeship to a brother or sister of
-the Carpenters’ Company conferred the right of freedom upon any girls
-who chose to avail themselves of the privilege, even when the trade
-actually learnt was not that of carpentry. Amongst the girl apprentices
-only one other was directly bound to a woman, namely “Elizabetha filia
-Hester Eitchus ux. Geo. Eitchus nuper Civi et Carpentar. pon se dict
-Hester matri pro septem ann a dat etc.”[363] Although Hester Eitchus is
-here called “uxor” she must really have been a widow, for her name would
-not have appeared alone on the indenture during her husband’s lifetime;
-boy apprentices had previously been bound to him, and no doubt as in the
-other cases husband and wife had been prosecuting their several trades
-simultaneously, the wife retaining her membership in the Carpenters’
-Company when left a widow. An independent business must have been very
-necessary for the wife in cases where the husband worked for wages, and
-not on his own account, for in 1563 carpenter’s wages were fixed “be my
-lorde mayors commandement ... yf they dyd fynde themselves meat and
-drynke at xiiijᵈ the day and their servants xijᵈ. Itm otherwises the
-sayd carpynters to have viijᵈ the day wayges meat & drynke & their
-servants vjᵈ meat & drynke.”[364] These wages would have been inadequate
-for the maintenance of a family in London, and therefore unless the
-carpenter was in a position to employ apprentices and enter into
-contracts, in which case he could find employment also for his wife, she
-must have traded in some way on her own account.
-
-Footnote 363:
-
- _Ibid._ Vol. I., _App. Entry Book_, p. 159, Feb. 3, 1679.
-
-Footnote 364:
-
- _Records of the Worshipful Company of Carpenters_, Vol. III., p. 75,
- _Court Book_.
-
-It is difficult to say how far the position of women in the Stationers’
-and Carpenters’ Companies was typical of their position in the other
-great London Companies and in the Gilds and Companies which flourished
-or decayed in the provinces. All these organisations resembled each
-other in certain broad outlines, but varied considerably in details. All
-seem to have agreed in the early association of brothers and sisters on
-equal terms for social and religious purposes. Thus the Carpenters’ was
-“established one perpetual brotherhood, or guild ... to consist of one
-master, three wardens, and commonalty of freemen, of the Mystery of
-Carpentry ... and of the brethren and sisters of freemen of the said
-mystery.”[365] The charter granted by Henry VI. to the Armourers and
-Braziers provided “that the brethren and sisters of that ffraternity or
-guild, ... should be of itself one perpetual community ... and have
-perpetual sucession. And that the brothers and sisters of the same
-ffraternity or guild, ... might choose and make one Master and two
-Wardens from among themselves; and also elect and make another Master
-and other Wardens into the office aforesaid, according to the ordinances
-of the better and worthier part of the same brethren and
-sisters....”[366] In this case the sisters were regarded as active and
-responsible members but of the Merchant Taylors Clode says “It is clear
-that women were originally admitted as members and took apprentices;
-that it was customary in later years for women to dine or be present at
-the quarterly meetings is evidenced by a notice of their absence in
-1603, ‘the upper table near to the garden, commonly called the _Mistris
-Table_, was furnished with sword bearer and gentlemen strangers, there
-being no gentlewomen at this Quarter Day.’ In many of the wills of early
-benefactors, sisters as well as brethren are named as ‘devisees.’ Thus
-in Sibsay’s (1404) the devise is ‘to the Master and Wardens and brethren
-and sisters’.... When an Almsman of the Livery married with the
-Company’s consent his widow remained during her life an almswoman, and
-was buried by the Company. In that sense she was treated as a sister of
-the fraternity, but she probably exercised no rights as a member of
-it.”[367]
-
-Footnote 365:
-
- Jupp, _Carpenters_, p. 12.
-
-Footnote 366:
-
- _Armourers and Braziers._, _Charter and By-laws of the Company_, p. 4.
-
-Footnote 367:
-
- Clode, _History of the Merchant Taylors_, London, Vol. I., p. 42.
-
-The sisters are often referred to in the rules relating to the dinners,
-which were such an important feature of gild life. The “Grocers”
-provided that “Every one of the Fraternity from thenceforward, that has
-a wife or companion, shall come to the feast, and bring with him a lady
-if he pleases; [et ameyne avec luy une demoiselle si luy plest] if they
-cannot come, for the reasons hereafter named, that is to say, sick, big
-with child, and near deliverance, without any other exception; and that
-every man shall pay for his wife 20d.; also, that each shall pay 5s.,
-that is to say, 20d. for himself, 20d. for his companion, and 20d. for
-the priest. And that all women who are not of the Fraternity, and
-afterwards should be married to any of the Fraternity, shall be entered
-and looked upon as of the Fraternity for ever, and shall be assisted and
-made as one of us; and after the death of her husband, the widow shall
-come to the dinner, and pay 40d. if she is able. And if the said widow
-marries any one not of the Fraternity, she shall not be admitted to the
-said feast, nor have any assistance given her, as long as she remains so
-married, be whom she will; nor none of us ought to meddle or interfere
-in anything with her on account of the Fraternity, as long as she
-remains unmarried.”[368]
-
-Footnote 368:
-
- Heath, _Acct. of the Worshipful Company of Grocers_, p. 53, memo.
- 1348.
-
-The Wardens of the Merchant Gild at Beverley were directed to make in
-turn yearly “one dinner for all his bretherne and theire wieves.”[369]
-The Pewterers decided that “every man and wif that comyth to the
-yemandries dynner sholde paye xvjid. And every Jorneyman that hath a wif
-... xvjᵈ. And every lone man beinge a howsholder that comyth to dynner
-shall paye xijᵈ. and every Jorneyman having no wif and comyth to dynner
-shall paye viijᵈ. ... every man that hath bynne maryed wᵗʰin the same ij
-years shall geve his cocke or eƚƚe paye xijᵈ.... Provided always that
-none bringe his gest wᵗʰ him wᵗʰowt he paye for his dynner as moch as he
-paith for hymself and that they bring no childerne wᵗʰ them passing one
-& no more.”[370] In 1605 it was agreed that “ther shalbe called all the
-whole clothyng and ther wyves and the wydowes whose husbandes have byne
-of the clothynge and that shalbe payed ijs. man & wyffe and the wydowes
-xijid. a peece.”[371] In 1672, the expense of entertaining becoming
-irksome, “an order of Coʳᵗ for ye abateing extraoʳdinary Feasting” was
-made, requiring the “Master & Wardens ... to deposit each 12li & spend
-yᵉ one half thereof upon the Masters & Wardens ffeast this day held, and
-the Other moyety to be and remain to yᵉ Compᵃ use. Now this day the sᵈ
-Feast was kept but by reason of the women being invited yᵉ Charge of yᵉ
-Feast was soe extream that nothing could be cleered to yᵉ house
-according to yᵉ sᵈ order. There being Spent near 90li.”[372]
-
-Footnote 369:
-
- Leach, _Beverley Town Documents_, p. 95, 1582.
-
-Footnote 370:
-
- Welch, _History of Pewterers Company_, Vol. I., p. 201, 1559.
-
-Footnote 371:
-
- _Ibid._ Vol. II., p. 47.
-
-Footnote 372:
-
- Welch, _Hist. of Pewterers’ Company_, Vol. II., p. 145.
-
-Sisters are also remembered in the provisions made for religious
-observances and assistance in times of sickness. The ordinances of the
-Craft of the Glovers at Kingston-upon-Hull required that “every brother
-and syster of ye same craffᵗᵗ be at every offeryng within the sayd town
-with every brother or syster of the same crafftt as well at weddynges as
-at beryalles.” Brethren and sisters were to have lights at their
-decease, and if in poverty to have them freely.[373] The “yoman
-taillours” made application “that they and others of their fraternity of
-yomen yearly may assemble ... near to Smithfield and make offerings for
-the souls of brethren and sister etc.”[374] In the city of Chester, when
-a charter was given to joiners, carvers and turners to become a separate
-Company, not part of the Carpenters’ as formerly, to be called the
-Company of the Joiners, it is said “Every brother of the said
-occupacions shall bee ready att all times ... to come unto ... the
-burial of every brother and sister of the said occupacions.”[375]
-
-Footnote 373:
-
- Lambert, _Two Thousand Years of Gild Life_, p. 217, 1499.
-
-Footnote 374:
-
- _Ibid._ p. 229, 1415.
-
-Footnote 375:
-
- Harl. MSS., 2054, fo. 5. _Charter of the Joiner’s Co._
-
-Sisters must have played an important part in the functions of the
-Merchant Taylors of Bristol, for an order was made in 1401 that “the
-said maister and iiii wardeyns schall ordeyne every yere good and
-convenient cloth of oon suyt for all brothers and sisters of the said
-fraternity....”[376] The Charter of this Company provided that “ne man
-ne woman be underfange into the fraternite abovesaid withoute assent of
-the Keper and maister etc. ... and also that hit be a man or woman y
-knowe of good conversation and honeste.... Also y^f eny brother other
-soster of thys fraternite above sayde that have trewly y payed hys
-deutes yat longeth to ye fraternite falle into poverte other into
-myschef and maie note travalle for to he be releved, he schal have of ye
-comune goodes every weke xxiᵈ of monei ... and yf he be a man yat hath
-wyfe and chylde he schal trewly departe alle hys goodes bytwyne heir and
-hys wyfe and children; and ye partie that falleth to hym he schal trewly
-yeld up to ye mayster and to ye wardynes of the fraternite obove sayde,
-in ye maner to fore seide....” The brothers and sisters shall share in
-the funeral ceremonies, etc., “also gif eny soster chyde with other
-openly in the strete, yat eyther schalle paye a pounde wex to ye lighte
-of the fraternite; and gif they feygte eyther schall paie twenty pounde
-wex to ye same lyte upon perryle of hir oth gif thei be in power. And
-gif eny soster by y proved a commune chider among her neygbourys after
-ones warnyng other tweies at the (delit) ye thridde tyme ye maister and
-ye wardeynes of ye fraternite schulle pute her out of ye compaynye for
-ever more.”[377]
-
-Footnote 376:
-
- Fox (F. F.) _Merchant Taylors, Bristol_, p. 31.
-
-Footnote 377:
-
- _Ibid._ p. 26-9.
-
-Chiding and reviling were failings common to all gilds, and were by no
-means confined to the sisters. The punishments appointed by the Merchant
-Gild at Beverley for those “who set up detractions, or rehearse past
-disputes, or unduly abuse”[378] are for brothers only. And though it was
-“Agreed by the Mʳ Wardens and Assystaunce” of the Pewterers that “Robert
-west sholde bringe in his wif vpon ffrydaye next to reconsile her self
-to Mʳ Cacher and others of the Company for her naughty mysdemeanoʳ of
-her tonge towarde them,”[379] the quarrelling among the Carpenters seems
-to have been almost confined to the men.
-
-Footnote 378:
-
- Leach, _Beverley Town Documents_, p. 78, 1494.
-
-Footnote 379:
-
- Welch, Charles, _Hist. of Pewterers Company_, Vol. I., p. 200, 1558.
-
-There can be no doubt that the sisters shared fully in the social and
-religious life of the Gilds; it is also perfectly clear that the wife
-was regarded by the Gild or Company as her husband’s partner, and that,
-after his death she was confirmed in the possession of his business with
-his leases and apprentices at least during the term of her widowhood.
-
-But the extent to which she really worked with him in his trade and was
-qualified to carry it on as a going concern after his death is much more
-difficult to determine, varying as it did from trade to trade and
-depending so largely in each case upon the natural capacity of the
-individual woman concerned. The extent to which a married woman could
-work with her husband depended partly upon whether his trade was carried
-on at home or abroad. It has been suggested that the carpenters who
-often were engaged in building operations could not profit much by their
-wives’ assistance, but many trades which in later times have become
-entirely closed to women were then so dependent on their labour that
-sisters are mentioned specifically in rules concerning the conditions of
-manufacture. Thus the charter of the Armourers and Brasiers was granted
-in the seventeenth year of James I. “to the Master and Wardens and
-Brothers and Sisters of the ffraternity ... that from thenceforth All &
-all manner of brass and copper works ... edged tools ... small guns ...
-wrought by any person or persons being of the same ffraternity ...
-should be searched and approved ... by skilful Artificers of the said
-ffraternity.”[380] Rules which were drawn up at Salisbury in 1612
-provide that no free brother or sister shall “rack, set, or cause to be
-racked or set, any cloth upon any tenter, on the Sabbath day, under the
-forfeiture of 2s.” The Wardens of the Company of Merchants, Mercers,
-Grocers, Apothecaries, Goldsmiths, Drapers, Upholsterers, and
-Embroiderers were ordered to search the wares, merchandise, weights and
-measures of sisters as well as brothers.[381] “No free brother or sister
-is at any time to put any horse leather into boots or shoes or any
-liquored calves leather into boots or shoes, to be sold between the
-feast of St. Bartholomew the Apostle and the Annunciation of the Virgin
-Mary.... No free brother or sister is to keep or set up any standing in
-the market place, except in fair times. No brother or sister is to set
-open his or her shop, or to do any work, in making or mending of boots
-and shoes on the Sabbath day, on pain of twelve pence forfeit.”[382]
-
-Footnote 380:
-
- _Armourers and Brasiers, Charter and Bye laws of Company of._, p. 5.
- See also Johnson, _Ordinances of the Drapers of London_, Vol. I., p.
- 280, 1524).
-
- “(it shall not be lawful unto any brother or sister freed in this
- fellyship to take mo. apprentices than may stand in good order for
- their degree) ... every brother being in the master’s livery shall pay
- 6s. 8d. and every sister whose husband has been of the aforesaid
- livery shall pay for every apprentice 6s. 8d. and every other brother
- or sister not being of the master’s livery shall pay for every
- apprentice 3s. 4d.”
-
-Footnote 381:
-
- Hoare, Sir R. C., _Hist. of Modern Wilts_, Vol. VI., p. 340.
-
-Footnote 382:
-
- _Ibid._ Vol. VI., p. 343.
-
-Rules which specifically permit the employment of the master’s wife or
-daughter in his trade while excluding other unapprenticed persons, are
-in themselves evidence that they were often so employed. Thus the
-Glovers allowed “noe brother of this ffraternity” to “take an apprentice
-vnder the full end and tearme of seaven years ffuly to be compleat ...
-excepting brothers son or daughter....”[383] No leatherseller might “put
-man, child or woman to work in the same mistery, if they be not bound
-apprentice, and inrolled in the same mistery; excepting their wives and
-children.”[384] Similarly the Girdlers in 1344 ordered that “no one of
-the trade shall get any woman to work other than his wedded wife or
-daughter”[385] while by a rule of the Merchant Taylors, Bristol “no
-person ... shall cutt make or sell any kynde of garment, garments, hose
-or breeches within ye saide cittie ... unles he be franchised and made
-free of the saide crafte (widdowes whose husbandes were free of ye saide
-crafte duringe the tyme of their wyddowhedd vsinge ye same with one
-Jorneyman and one apprentice only excepted).”[386]
-
-Footnote 383:
-
- Ferguson, _Carlisle_, p. 212, _Glover’s Gild_, 1665.
-
-Footnote 384:
-
- Black, W. H., _Articles of the Leathersellers_, p. 21, 1398.
-
-Footnote 385:
-
- Smythe, W. D., _Hist. of Worshipful Co. of Girdlers, London_, p. 63.
-
-Footnote 386:
-
- Fox, F. F., _Merchant Taylors, Bristol_, pp. 64-65.
-
-The association of women with their husbands in business matters is
-often suggested by the presence of both their names on indentures.
-Walter Beemer, for example, was apprenticed to John Castle of Marke and
-Johane his wife to be instructed and brought up in the trade of a
-tanner.[387] Sometimes it is shown by the indifference with which money
-transactions are conducted either with husband or with wife. When the
-Corporation at Dorchester purchased a new mace in 1660, Mr. Sam White’s
-wife appears to have acted throughout in the matter. An entry in the
-records for 1660 states that “the silver upon the old maces ... comes
-unto iijˡⁱ.xviijˢ.iijᵈ, which was intended to bee delivered to Mr. Sam:
-White’s wife towards payment for the new Maces.... Mr. White hath it the
-18th of January, 1660.” (Inserted later).
-
- July 3rd, 1661.—pd. Mrs. White as appeareth forward — 5 0 0
-
- October 4th, 1661.—pd. Mrs. White more as appeareth forward — 4 10 0
-
- About Michaelmas, Mr. Sauage pd Mrs. White in dollers— 7 7 0
-
- April 26th, 1661.—It is ordered and agreed that twenty shillings a
- man, which shall be lent and advanced to Mr. Samuel White’s wife by
- any of this Company towards payment for the Maces shall be repayed
- back to them.”[388]
-
-Footnote 387:
-
- _Somerset Quarter Sessions Records_, Vol. III., p. 165, 1652.
-
-Footnote 388:
-
- Mayo, G. H., _Municipal Records, Dorchester_, p. 466.
-
-An equal indifference is shown by the Carpenters’ Company in making
-payments for their ale. Sometimes these are entered to William Whytte,
-but quite as often to “his wyffe.” For example in 1556 “Itm payd for
-Yest to Whytte’s wyffe iiijᵈ.”[389] “Resd of Whytte’s wyffe her hole
-yere’s Rent in ale xxixˢ iiijᵈ.”[390] “Itm payd to whytte’s wyffe for
-ale above the rent of hyr howsse iijˢ.vjᵈ.” “Itm payd to whytte’s wyffe
-for hopyng of tobbis xvjᵈ.”[391] Finally, in 1559, when perhaps William
-Whytte had departed this life, it is entered “Resd of Mother whytte hole
-yeres rent xxixˢ vijᵈ.”[392]
-
-Footnote 389:
-
- _Rec. of Worshipful Co. of Carpenters_, Vol. IV., p. 56, _Warden’s
- Acct. Book_, 1556.
-
-Footnote 390:
-
- _Ibid._ Vol. IV., p. 86.
-
-Footnote 391:
-
- _Ibid._ Vol. IV., p. 88.
-
-Footnote 392:
-
- _Ibid._ Vol. IV., p. 101.
-
-The Pewterers, in order to check stealing, ordered that “none of the
-sayde Crafte shall bye anye Leade of Tylers, Laborers, Masons, boyes,
-nor of women Nor of none such as shall seme to be a Suspect pson,”
-adding “that none of the sayde companye shalbe excusyd by his wif or
-servannte nor none other suche lyk excuse.”[393]
-
-Footnote 393:
-
- Welch, _Hist. of Pewterers’ Company_, Vol. I., pp. 180-181.
-
-Gild rules recognise the authority of the mistress over apprentices, the
-Clockmakers ordaining that “no servant or apprentice that ... hath
-without just and reasonable cause, departed from his master, mistress or
-dame, ... shall be admitted to work for himself,”[394] while the charter
-of the Glass-sellers provides suitable punishment “if any apprentice ...
-shall misbehave himself towards his master or mistress ... or shall lie
-out of his master or mistress’s house without his or her privity.”[395]
-
-Footnote 394:
-
- Overall, _Company of Clockmakers_, London, p. 43, 1632.
-
-Footnote 395:
-
- Ramsay, Wm., _Hist. of the Glass-Sellers_, p. 125.
-
-When a man who belonged to Gild or Company died, his wife was free to
-continue his business under her own management, retaining her position
-as a free sister, or she might withdraw from trade and transfer her
-apprentices to another brother. In the Carpenters’ and some other trades
-the latter was the more usual course to follow; thus Thomas Mycock, a
-cutler, on taking over an apprentice who had served John Kay, deceased,
-six years, covenanted to pay Kay’s widow 20s. a year for the three
-remaining years,[396] but on the other hand the widow Poynton was paid
-15s. 7d. “for glass worke” by the Burgery of Sheffield;[397] showing
-that she had not withdrawn from business on her husband’s death. It is
-clear that widows often lost their rights as sisters, if they took, as a
-second husband, a man who was not and did not become a brother of the
-same Gild. Thus there is an entry in the “Pewterers’ Records,” 1678,
-concerning “Mrs. Sicily Moore, formerly the wife of Edward Fish, late
-member of this Compᵃ decđ, and since marryed to one Moore, a fforeignir,
-now also decđ, desired to be admitted into the ffreedome of this Compᵃ.
-After some debate the Court agreed and soe Ordered that she shall be
-received into the ffreedom of the Compᵃ Gratis, onely paying usuall
-ffees and this Condition that she shall not bind any app’ntice by virtue
-of the sᵈ Freedom.”[398]
-
-Footnote 396:
-
- Leader, _Hist. of Company of Cutlers_, Vol. I., p. 47, 1696.
-
-Footnote 397:
-
- Leader, _Records of the Burgery of Sheffield_, p. 227, 1685.
-
-Footnote 398:
-
- Welch, _Hist. of Pewterers’ Company_, Vol. II., p. 153.
-
-Instances occur in which an apprentice was discharged because “the wife,
-after the death of her Husband, taught him not.”[399] The apprentice
-naturally brought forward this claim if by so doing there was a chance
-of shortening the term of his service, but he was not always successful.
-The Justices dismissed a case brought by Edward Steel, ordering him to
-serve Elizabeth Apprice, widow, the remainder of his term. He was
-apprenticed in 1684 to John Apprice Painter-Stainer for nine years; he
-had served seven years when his master died, and he now declares that
-Elizabeth, the widow, refuses to instruct him. She insists that since
-her husband’s death she has provided able workmen to instruct this
-apprentice, and that he was now capable of doing her good service.[400]
-When the “widowe Holton prayed that she [being executor to her husband]
-maye have the benefitt of the service of Roger Jakes, her husband’s
-apprentice by Indenture, for the residue of the years to come, which he
-denyeth to performe, it was ordered that th’apprentice shall dwell and
-serve his dame duringe the residue of his terme, she providing for him
-as well work as other things fitt for him.”[401] The Gilders having
-accused Richard Northy of having more than the just number of
-apprentices, he stated in his defence that the apprentice “was not any
-that was taken or bound by him, but was left unto him by express words
-in the will of his deceased mother-in-law whᶜʰ will, wᵗʰ the probate
-thereof, he now produced in court.”[402]
-
-Footnote 399:
-
- Stow, _London_, Book V., p. 335.
-
-Footnote 400:
-
- _Middlesex Sessions Book_, p. 47, 1691.
-
-Footnote 401:
-
- Guilding, _Reading Records_, Vol. II., p. 362.
-
-Footnote 402:
-
- Smythe, _Company of Girdlers_, p. 133, 1635.
-
-The occurrence of widows’ names among the cases which came before the
-Courts for infringements of the Company’s rules is further evidence that
-they were actively engaged in business. “Two bundles of unmade girdles
-were taken from widows Maybury and Bliss, young widows they were ordered
-to pay 5s. each by way of fine for making and selling unlawful
-wares.”[403] Richard Hewatt, of Northover in Glastonbury, fuller, when
-summoned to appear before the Somerset Quarter Sessions as a witness,
-refers to his dame Ursula Lance who had “lost 2 larrows worth five
-shillings and that Robert Marsh, one of the constables of Somerton
-Hundred, found in the house of William Wilmat the Larrows cloven in
-pieces and put in the oven, and the Rack-hookes that were in the larrows
-were found in the fire in the said house.”[404]
-
-Footnote 403:
-
- _Ibid._ p. 87, 1627.
-
-Footnote 404:
-
- _Somerset Q.S. Rec._, Vol. III., pp. 365-6, 1659.
-
-Widows were very dependent upon the assistance of journeymen, and often
-chose a relation for this responsible position. At Reading “All the
-freeman Blacksmiths in this Towne complayne that one Edward Nitingale, a
-smith, beinge a forreynour, useth the trade of a blacksmith in this
-Corporacion to the great dammage of the freemen: it was answered that he
-is a journeyman to the Widowe Parker, late wife to Humfrey Parker, a
-blacksmith, deceassed, and worketh as her servant at 5s. a weeke, she
-being his aunt, and was advised to worke in noe other manner but as a
-journeyman.”[405] The connection often ended in marriage; it was brought
-to the notice of one of the Quaker’s Meetings in London that one of
-their Members, “Will Townsend ... card maker proposes to take to wife
-Elizabeth Doshell of ye same place to be his wife, and ye same Elizabeth
-doth propose to take ye said Will to be her husband, the yonge man
-liveing with her as a journey-man had thought and a beliefe that she
-would come to owne ye truth and did propose to her his Intentions
-towards her as to marige before she did come to owne the truth which
-thinge being minded to him by ffriends ... he has acknowledged it soe
-and sayes it had been beter that he had waited till he had had his hope
-in some measure answered.”[406]
-
-Footnote 405:
-
- Guilding, _Reading Records_, Vol. III., p. 502, 1640.
-
-Footnote 406:
-
- _Horsleydown Monthly Meeting Minute Book_, 19 11mo., 1675.
-
-Such marriages, though obviously offering many advantages, were not
-always satisfactory. A lamentable picture of an unfortunate one is given
-in the petition of Sarah Westwood, wife of Robert Westwood, Feltmaker,
-presented to Laud in 1639, showing that “your petitioner was (formerly)
-the wife of one John Davys, alsoe a Feltmaker, who dying left her a
-howse furnished with goodes sufficient for her use therein and charged
-with one childe, as yet but an infant, and two apprentices, who, for the
-residue of their termes ... could well have atchieved sufficient for the
-maynetenance of themselves and alsoe of your petitioner and her child.
-That being thus left in good estate for livelyhood, her nowe husband
-became a suitor unto her in the way of marriage, being then a journeyman
-feltmaker....”
-
-Soon after their marriage, “Westwood following lewde courses, often
-beate and abused your petitioner, sold and consumed what her former
-husband left her, threatened to kill her and her child, turned them out
-of dores, refusing to afford them any means of subsistance, but on the
-contrary seekes the utter ruin of them both and most scandelously has
-traduced your petitioner giving out in speeches that she would have
-poysoned him thereby to bring a generall disgrace upon her, ... and
-forbiddes all people where she resortes to afford her entertaignment,
-and will not suffer her to worke for the livelyhood of her and her
-child, but will have accompt of the same.... Albeit he can get by his
-labour 20/- a weeke, yet he consumes the same in idle company ... having
-lewdlie spent all he had with your petitioner.”[407]
-
-Footnote 407:
-
- _S.P.D._, ccccxxxv. 42, Dec. 6, 1639.
-
-Though their entrance to the Gilds and Companies was most often obtained
-by women through marriage, it has already been shown that their
-admission by apprenticeship was not unknown, and they also occasionally
-acquired freedom by patrimony; thus “Katherine Wetwood, daughter of
-Humphrey Wetwood, of London, Pewterer, was sworn and made free by the
-Testimony of the Master and Wardens of the Merchant Taylors’ Co., and of
-two Silk Weavers, that she was a virgin and twenty-one years of age. She
-paid the usual patrimony fine of 9s. 2d.”[408] More than one hundred
-years later Mary Temple was made free of the Girdlers’ Company by
-patrimony.[409] No jealousy is expressed of the women who were members
-of the Companies, but all others were rigorously excluded from
-employment. Complaints were brought before the Girdlers’ that certain
-Girdlers in London “set on worke such as had not served 7 years at the
-art, and also for setting forreigners and maids on worke.”[410] Rules
-were made in Bristol in 1606, forbidding women to work at the trades of
-the whitawers (white leather-dressers), Point-makers and Glovers.[411]
-
-Footnote 408:
-
- Welch, _Pewterers_, Vol. II., p. 92, 1633-4.
-
-Footnote 409:
-
- Smythe, _Company of Girdlers_, p. 128, 1747.
-
-Footnote 410:
-
- _Ibid._ p. 88, 1628.
-
-Footnote 411:
-
- Latimer, _Annals of Bristol_, p. 26, 1606.
-
-In the unprotected trades where the Gild organisation had broken down,
-and the profits of the small tradesmen had been reduced to a minimum by
-unlimited competition, the family depended upon the labour of mother and
-children as well as the father for its support. Petitions presented to
-the King concerning grievances under which they suffer, generally
-include wives and children in the number of those engaged in the trade
-in question. On a proposal to tax tobacco pipes, the makers show “that
-all the poorer sort of the Trade must be compelled to lay it down, for
-want of Stock or Credit to carry it on; and so their Wives and Children,
-who help to get their Bread, must of necessity perish, or become a
-Charge to their respective Parishes. That when a Gross of Pipes are
-made, they sell them for 1s. 6d. and 1s. 10d., out of which 2d. or 3d.
-is their greatest Profit. And they not already having Stock, or can make
-Pipes fast enough to maintain their Families, how much less can they be
-capable, when half the Stock they have, must be paid down to pay the
-King his Duty?”[412]
-
-Footnote 412:
-
- _Humble Petition and Case of the Tobacco Pipe Makers of the Citys of
- London and Westminster, 1695._
-
-The Glovers prepared a memorandum showing the great grievances there
-would be if a Duty be laid on Sheep and Lamb Skins, Drest in Oyl etc.
-“The Glovers,” they say, “are many Thousands in Number, in the Counties
-of England, City of London and Liberties thereof, and generally so Poor
-(the said Trade being so bad and Gloves so plenty) that mear Necessity
-doth compel them to Sell their Goods daily to the Glove-sellers, and to
-take what Prises they will give them, to keep them and their Children
-and Families at Work to maintain them, or else they must perrish for
-want of Bred.”[413]
-
-Footnote 413:
-
- _Reasons humbly offered by the Leather-Dressers and Glovers, &c._
-
-The Pin-makers say that their company “consists for the most part of
-poor and indigent People, who have neither Credit nor Money to purchase
-Wyre of the Merchant at the best hand, but are forced for want thereof,
-to buy only small Parcels of the second or third Buyer, as they have
-occasion to use it, and to sell off the Pins they make of the same from
-Week to Week, as soon as they are made, for ready money, to feed
-themselves, their Wives, and Children, whom they are constrained to
-imploy to go up and down every Saturday Night from Shop to Shop to offer
-their Pins for Sale, otherwise cannot have mony to buy bread.”[414]
-
-Footnote 414:
-
- _Case or Petition of the Corporation of Pin-makers._
-
-A similar picture is given in the “Mournfull Cryes of many thousand
-Poore tradesmen, who are ready to famish through decay of Trade.” “Oh
-that the cravings of our Stomacks could bee heard by the Parliament and
-City! Oh that the Teares of our poore famishing Babes were botled! Oh
-that their tender Mothers Cryes for bread to feed them were ingraven in
-brasse.... O you Members of Parliament and rich men in the City, that
-are at ease, and drink Wine in Bowles ... you that grind our faces and
-Flay off our skins ... is there none to Pity.... Its your Taxes Customes
-and Excize, that compels the Country to raise the price of Food and to
-buy nothing from us but meere absolute necessaries; and then you of the
-City that buy our Worke, must have your Tables furnished ... and
-therefore will give us little or nothing for our Worke, even what you
-please, because you know wee must sell for Monyes to set our Families on
-worke, or else wee famish ... and since the late Lord Mayor Adams, you
-have put into execution an illegall, wicked Decree of the Common
-Counsell; whereby you have taken our goods from us, if we have gone to
-the Innes to sell them to the Countrimen; and you have murdered some of
-our poor wives, that have gone to Innes to find countrimen to buie
-them.”[415]
-
-Footnote 415:
-
- _Mournfull Cryes of many Thousand Poore Tradesmen_, 1647.
-
-In each case it will be noticed that the wife’s activity is specially
-mentioned in connection with the sale of the goods. Women were so
-closely connected with industrial life in London that when the Queen
-proposed to leave London in 1641 it was the women who petitioned
-Parliament, declaring, “that your Petitioners, their Husbands, their
-Children and their Families, amounting to many thousand soules; have
-lived in plentifull and good fashion, by the exercise of severall Trades
-and venting of divers workes.... All depending wholly for the sale of
-their commodities, (which is the maintenance and very existence and
-beeing of themselves, their husbands, and families) upon the splendour
-and glory of the English Court, and principally upon that of the Queenes
-Majesty.”[416]
-
-Footnote 416:
-
- _Humble Petition of many thousands of Courtiers, Citizens, Gentlemens
- and Tradesmens Wives, &c._
-
-In addition to these Trades, skilled and semi-skilled, in which men and
-women worked together, certain skilled women’s trades existed in London
-which were sufficiently profitable for considerable premiums to be paid
-with the girls who were apprenticed to them.[417] These girls probably
-continued to exercise their own trade after marriage, their skill
-serving them instead of dowry, the Customs of London providing that
-“married women who practise certain crafts in the city alone and without
-their husbands, may take girls as apprentices to serve them and learn
-their trade, and these apprentices shall be bound by their indentures of
-apprenticeship to both husband and wife, to learn the wife’s trade as is
-aforesaid, and such indentures shall be enrolled as well for women as
-for men.”[418] The girls who were apprenticed to Carpenters were
-evidently on this footing.
-
-Footnote 417:
-
- Ante, p. 175.
-
-Footnote 418:
-
- Eileen Power, by kind permission, 1419.
-
-References in contemporary documents to women who were following skilled
-or semi-skilled trades in London are very frequent. Thus Thomas Swan is
-reported to have committed thefts “on his mistress Alice Fox,
-Wax-chandler of Old Bailey.”[419] Mrs. Cellier speaks of “one Mrs.
-Phillips, an upholsterer,”[420] while the Rev. Giles Moore notes in his
-diary “payed Mistress Cooke, in Shoe Lane, for a new trusse, and for
-mending the old one and altering the plate thereof, £1 5 0; should shee
-dye, I am in future to inquire for her daughter Barbara, who may do the
-like for mee.”[421] Isaac Derston was “put an app. to Anthony Watts for
-the term of seven years, but turned over to the widow—dwelling near:
-palls: who bottoms cane chaires, £2 10 0.”[422] That the bottoming of
-cane chairs was a poor trade is witnessed by the meagreness of the
-premium paid in this case.
-
-Footnote 419:
-
- _C.S.P.D._ cv. 53, Jan. 19, 1619.
-
-Footnote 420:
-
- Cellier (Mrs.) _Malice Defeated_., p. 25.
-
-Footnote 421:
-
- _Suss. Arch. Coll._, Vol. I., p. 123, _Journal Rev._, 1676.
-
-Footnote 422:
-
- _Monthly Meeting Minute Book, Peele_, Nov. 24, 1687.
-
-No traces can be found of any organisation existing in the skilled
-women’s trades, such as upholstery, millinery, mantua-making, but a Gild
-existed among the women who sorted and packed wool at Southampton. A
-Sisterhood consisting of twelve women of good and honest demeanour was
-formed there as a company to serve the merchants in the occupation of
-covering pokes or baloes [bales]. Two of the sisters acted as wardens.
-In 1554 a court was held to adjudicate on the irregular attendance of
-some of the sisters. The names of two wardens and eleven sisters are
-given; no one who was absent from her duties for more than three months
-was permitted to return to the Sisterhood without the Mayor’s licence.
-“Item, yᵗ is ordered by the sayde Maior and his bretherne that all suche
-as shall be nomynated and appoynted to be of the systeryd shall make a
-brekefaste at their entrye for a knowlege and shal bestowe at the least
-xxᵈ or ijˢ, or more as they lyste.”[423]
-
-Footnote 423:
-
- Davies. (J. S.) _Hist. of Southampton_, p. 279.
-
-Possibly when more records of the Gilds and Companies have been
-published in a complete form, some of the gaps which are left in this
-account of the position of women in the skilled and semi-skilled trades
-may be filled in; but the extent to which married women were engaged in
-them must always remain largely a matter of conjecture, and
-unfortunately it is precisely this point which is most interesting to
-the sociologist. Practically all adult women were married, and the
-character of the productive work which an economic organisation allots
-to married women and the conditions of their labour decide very largely
-the position of the mother in society, and therefore, ultimately, the
-fate of her children. The fragmentary evidence which has been examined
-shows that, while the system of family industry lasted, it was so usual
-in the skilled and semi-skilled trades for women to share in the
-business life of their husbands that they were regarded as partners.
-Though the wife had rarely, if ever, served an apprenticeship to his
-trade, there were many branches in which her assistance was of great
-value, and husband and wife naturally divided the industry between them
-in the way which was most advantageous to the family, while unmarried
-servants, either men or women, performed the domestic drudgery. As
-capitalistic organisation developed, many avenues of industry were,
-however, gradually closed to married women. The masters no longer
-depended upon the assistance of their wives, while the journeyman’s
-position became very similar to that of the modern artisan; he was
-employed on the premises of his master, and thus, though his association
-with his fellows gave him opportunity for combination, his wife and
-daughters, who remained at home, did not share in the improvements which
-he effected in his own economic position. The alternatives before the
-women of this class were either to withdraw altogether from productive
-activity, and so become entirely dependent upon their husband’s
-goodwill, or else to enter the labour market independently and fight
-their battles alone, in competition not only with other women, but with
-men.
-
-Probably the latter alternative was still most often followed by married
-women, although at this time the idea that men “keep” their wives begins
-to prevail: but the force of the old tradition maintained amongst women
-a desire for the feeling of independence which can only be gained
-through productive activity, and thus married women, even when unable to
-work with their husbands, generally occupied themselves with some
-industry, however badly it might be paid.
-
-
- B. _Retail Trades._
-
-The want of technical skill and knowledge which so often hampered the
-position of women in the Skilled Trades, was a smaller handicap in
-Retail Trades, where manual dexterity and technical knowledge are less
-important than general intelligence and a lively understanding of human
-nature. Quick perception and social tact, which are generally supposed
-to be feminine characteristics, often proved useful even to the
-craftsman, when his wife assumed the charge of the financial side of his
-business; it is therefore not surprising to find women taking a
-prominent part in every branch of Retail Trade. In fact the woman who
-was left without other resources turned naturally to keeping a shop, or
-to the sale of goods in the street, as the most likely means for
-maintaining her children, and thus the woman shopkeeper is no infrequent
-figure in contemporary writings. For example, in one of the many
-pamphlets describing the incidents of the Civil War, we read that
-“Mistresse Phillips was sent for, who was found playing the good
-housewife at home (a thing much out of fashion) ... and committed close
-prisoner to castle.” Her husband having been driven before from town,
-“She was to care for ten children, the most of them being small, one
-whereof she at the same time suckled, her shop (which enabled her to
-keep all those) was ransacked,” £14 was taken, and the house plundered,
-horse and men billetted with her when she could scarce get bread enough
-for herself and her family without charity. She was tried, and condemned
-to death, when, the account continues, “Mistress Phillips not knowing
-but her turne was next, standing all the while with a halter about her
-neck over against the Gallowes, a Souldier would have put the halter
-under her Handkerchiefe, but she would not suffer him, speaking with a
-very audible voice, ‘I am not ashamed to suffer reproach and shame in
-this cause,’ a brave resolution, beseeming a nobler sex, and not unfit
-to be registered in the Book of Martyrs.”
-
-The woman shop-keeper is found also among the stock characters of the
-drama. In “The Old Batchelor” Belinda relates that “a Country Squire,
-with the Equipage of a Wife and two Daughters, came to Mrs. Snipwel’s
-Shop while I was there ... the Father bought a Powder-Horn, and an
-Almanack, and a Comb-Case; the Mother, a great Fruz-Towr, and a fat
-Amber-Necklace; the Daughters only tore two Pair of Kid-leather Gloves,
-with trying ’em on.”[424]
-
-Footnote 424:
-
- Congreve (Wm.). _The Old Batchelor_, Act iv., Sc. viii.
-
-Amongst the Quakers, shop-keeping was a usual employment for women.
-Thomas Chalkley, soon after his marriage “had a Concern to visit Friends
-in the counties of Surrey, Sussex and Kent, which I performed in about
-two Weeks Time, and came home and followed my calling, and was
-industrious therein; and when I had gotten something to bear my
-expenses, and settled my Wife in some little Business I found an
-Exercise on my Spirit to go over to _Ireland_.”[425] Another Quaker
-describes how he applied himself “to assist my Wife in her Business as
-well as I could, attending General, Monthly and other Meetings on public
-Occasions for three Years.”[426] The provision of the little stock
-needed for a shop was a favourite method of assisting widows.
-
-Footnote 425:
-
- Chalkley, _Journal_, pp. 30-31, 1690.
-
-Footnote 426:
-
- Bownas, Samuel, _Life of_, p. 135.
-
-The frequency with which payments to women are entered in account
-books[427] is further evidence of the extent to which they were engaged
-in Retail Trades, but this occupation was not freely open to all and any
-who needed it. It was, on the contrary, hedged about with almost as many
-restrictions as the gild trades. The craftsman was generally free to
-dispose of his own goods, but many restrictions hampered the Retailer,
-that is to say the person who bought to sell again. The community
-regarded this class with some jealousy, and limited their numbers.
-Hence, the poor woman who sought to improve her position by opening a
-little shop, did not always find her course clear. In fact there were
-many towns in which the barriers between her and an honest independence
-were insurmountable. Girls were, however, apprenticed to shopkeepers
-oftener than to the gild trades, and licences to sell were granted to
-freewomen as well as to freemen. At Dorchester, girls who had served an
-apprenticeship to shopkeepers were duly admitted to the freedom of the
-Borough; we find entered in the Minute Book the names of Celina Hilson,
-apprenticed to Mat. Hilson, Governor, haberdasher, and Mary Goodredge,
-spinster, haberdasher of small wares; also of James Bun (who had married
-Elizabeth Williams a freewoman), haberdasher of small wares; Elizabeth
-Williams, apprenticed seven years to her Mother, Mary W., tallow
-chaundler, and of William Weare, apprenticed to Grace Lacy, widow,
-woolen draper.[428] An order was granted by the Middlesex Quarter
-Sessions to discharge Mary Jemmett from apprenticeship to Jane Tyllard,
-widow, from whom she was to learn “the trade of keeping a linen
-shop,”[429] and an account is given of a difference between Susanna
-Shippey, of Mile End, Stepney, widow, and Ann Taylor, her apprentice,
-touching the discharge of the said apprentice. It appears that Ann has
-often defrauded her mistress of her goods and sold them for less than
-cost price.[430]
-
-Footnote 427:
-
- Mayo, _Municipal Records of Dorchester_, p. 428-9.
-
-Footnote 428:
-
- The Churchwardens of St. Margaret’s, Westminster, paid 6d. to
- “Goodwyfe Wells for salt to destroy the fleas in the Churchwarden’s
- pew.” (Cox. _Churchwardens Accts._, p. 321, 1610.). Among the Cromwell
- family receipts is one in 1624 “from ye Right worᵉ ye Lady Carr by the
- hands of Henry Hanby, the somme of twenty and one pounds in full
- payment of all Reckonings from the beginninge of the world ... by me
- ellen Sadler X” (_Cromwell Family Bills and Receipts_, p. 15.) “A bill
- for Mrs. Willie of Ramsie the 14 of April 1636
-
- for material and making your daughter petecoat
- for material and making your silk grogram coate
- for material and making your daughter’s gasson shute
- for material and making your daughter’s silke moheare wascote
- for material and making your damask coate
- Total 7. 17. 9.” (_Ibid._ p. 265).
-
- The Rev. Giles Moore bought “of Widdow Langley 2 more fine sheets, of
- Goodwyfe Seamer 9 ells. and a halfe of hempen cloath.” (_Suss. Arch.
- Coll._ Vol. I., p. 68, 1656. Rev. Giles Moore’s Journal).
-
- Foulis paid, in Scots money, Jan. 22, 1692 “to Mrs. Pouries lad for
- aniseed, carthamums &c. 11s.” (p. 144), and on Aug. 3, 1696 he
- “received from Eliz. Ludgate last Whits maill for yᵉ shop at fosters
- Wyndhead 25ˡⁱᵇ.” (p. 195). Jan. 14, 1704 “to my douchter Jean be Mrs.
- Cuthbertsons paymᵗ for 4 ell & ½ flowered calico to lyne my nightgowne
- 7. 13. 0.” (p. 339). May 23, 1704 “receaved from Agnes philp Whitsun,
- maill for the shop at fosters wyndhead and yᵉ key therof, and given it
- to the Candlemakers wife who has taken the shop 25ˡⁱᵇ” (p. 346).
- (Foulis _Acct. Book_). Similar entries are in the _Howard Household
- Book_, 1619. “To Mrs. Smith for lining [linen] for my Lord, had in
- Easter tearm, 5ˡⁱ xˢ. Mrs. Smith for napry had in May vjˡⁱ iiˢ”
- (_Howard Household Book_, _pp._ 105 and 161.).
-
-Footnote 429:
-
- _Middlesex County Records_, p. 180, 1698.
-
-Footnote 430:
-
- _Middlesex County Records_, p. 2, 1690.
-
-Little mercy was shown to either man or woman who engaged in the Retail
-Trade without having served an apprenticeship. A warrant was only issued
-to release “Elizabeth Beaseley from the Hospital of Bridewell on her
-brother John Beaseley’s having entered into bond that she shall leave
-off selling tobacco in the town of Wigan.”[431] Mary Keeling was
-presented at Nottingham “for falowing ye Treaid of a Grocer and Mercer
-and kepping open shope for on month last past, _contra Statum_, not
-being _aprentice_.”[432] At Carlisle it was ordered that “Isaack Tully
-shall submit himself to pay a fine to this trade if they shall think it
-fitting for taking his sister to keep & sell waires for him contrary to
-our order,”[433] and when it was reported that “Mrs. Studholme hath
-employed James Moorehead Scotsman to vend and sell goods in her shop
-contrary to an order of this company wee doe order that the wardens of
-our company shall fourthwith acquaint Mrs. Studholme yt. she must not be
-admitted to entertain him any longʳ in her employmt but that before our
-next quarter day she take some other course for keeping her shop and yt.
-he be noe longer employed therein till yt. time.”[434] At a later date
-Mrs. Sybil Hetherington, Mrs. Mary Nixon, Mrs. Jane Jackson, widow, and
-four men, were dealt with for having shops or retailery of goods
-contrary to the statute.[435]
-
-Footnote 431:
-
- _C. R._ 18th, August, 1640.
-
-Footnote 432:
-
- _Nottingham Records_, Vol. V., p. 331, 1686.
-
-Footnote 433:
-
- Ferguson, _Municipal Records, Carlisle_, p. 110, 1651.
-
-Footnote 434:
-
- _Ibid._ p. 112, 1668.
-
-Footnote 435:
-
- _Ibid._ p. 115, 1719.
-
-There were fewer restrictions on retailing in London than in the
-provinces, and trading was virtually free in the streets of London. An
-act of the Common Council, passed in 1631, deals with abuses rising from
-this freedom, declaring “that of late it is come to passe that divers
-unruly people, as Butchers, Bakers, Poulters, Chandlers, Fruiterers,
-Sempsters, sellers of Grocery wares, Oyster wives, Herbe wives, Tripe
-wives, and the like; who not contented to enjoy the benefit and common
-right of Citizens, by holding their market and continual Trades in their
-several Shops & houses where they dwell, doe ... by themselves, wives,
-children and seruants enter into, and take up their standings in the
-said streets and places appointed for the common Markets, unto which the
-country people only have in former times used to resort to vend and
-utter their victuall and other commodities; in which Markets the said
-Freemen doe abide for the most part of the day and that not only upon
-Market dayes, but all the weeke long with multitudes of Baskets, Tubs,
-Chaires, Boards & Stooles, ... the common Market places by these
-disordered people be so taken up, that country people when they come
-with victual and provision have no roome left them to set down their ...
-baskets.”[436]
-
-Footnote 436:
-
- _Act of Common Council for reformation, etc._
-
-In provincial towns, stalls in the market place were leased to tradesmen
-by the Corporation, the rents forming a valuable revenue for the town;
-infringements of the monopoly were summarily dealt with and often the
-privilege was reserved for “free” men and women. Thus at St. Albans
-Richard Morton’s wife was presented because she “doth ordinarilie sell
-shirt bands and cuffes, hankerchers, coifes, and other small lynenn
-wares openlie in the markett,”[437] not being free. It was as a special
-favour that leave was given to a poor woman to sell shoes in Carlisle
-market. The conditions are explained as follows:—“Whereas Ann Barrow the
-wife of Richard Barrow formerly one that by virtue of the Coldstream Act
-brought shoes and exposed them to sell in Carlisle market he being long
-abroad and his said wife poor the trade is willing to permit the said
-Ann to bring and sell shoes provided always they be the work of one
-former servant and noe more and for this permission she owns the trades
-favour and is thankful for it ... agreed and ordered that every yeare
-she shall pay 2s.”[438]
-
-Footnote 437:
-
- Gibbs, _Corporation Records of St. Albans_, p. 62, 1613.
-
-The Corporation at Reading was occupied for a whole year with the case
-of the “Aperne woman.” The first entry in the records states that
-“Steven Foorde of Newbery the aperne woman’s husband, exhibited a lettre
-from the Lord of Wallingford for his sellerman to shewe and sell
-aperninge[439] in towne, in Mr. Mayor’s handes, etc. And thereupon
-tollerated to doe as formerly she had done, payeing yerely 10s. to the
-Hall.”[440] Next year there is another entry to the effect that “it was
-agreed that Steven Foorde’s wief shall contynue sellinge of aperninge,
-as heretofore, and that the other woman usinge to sell suche stuffes at
-William Bagley’s dore shalbe forbidden, and shall not hencefourth be
-permitted to sell in the boroughe etc., and William Bagley shall be
-warned.”[441] The other woman proving recalcitrant, “at Steven Foorde’s
-wive’s request and complaynte it was grannted that William Bagley’s
-stranger, selling aperninge in contempt of the government, shalbe
-questioned.”[442] Finally it was “agreed that Steven Foorde’s wife shall
-henceforth keepe Markett and sell onely linsey woolsey of their own
-making in this markett, according to the Lord Wallingforde’s lettre, she
-payeing xs. per annum, and that noe other stranger shall henceforth
-keepe markett or sell lynsey and woolsey in this markett.”[443]
-
-Footnote 438:
-
- Ferguson, _Carlisle_, p. 187, 1669.
-
-Footnote 439:
-
- Stuff for Aprons.
-
-Footnote 440:
-
- Guilding. _Reading Records_, Vol. II., p. 171, 1624.
-
-Footnote 441:
-
- _Ibid._ Vol. II., p. 240, 1625.
-
-Footnote 442:
-
- _Ibid._ Vol. II., p. 252.
-
-Footnote 443:
-
- _Guilding, Reading Records_, Vol. II., p. 267.
-
-At this time, when most roads were mere bridle tracks, and few
-conveniences for travel existed, when even in towns the streets were so
-ill-paved that in bad weather the goodwife hesitated before going to the
-market, the dwellers in villages and hamlets were often fain to buy from
-pedlars who brought goods to their door and to sell butter and eggs to
-anyone who would undertake the trouble of collection. Their need was
-recognised by the authorities, who granted a certain number of licences
-to Badgers, Pedlars and Regraters, and probably many others succeeded in
-trading unlicensed. This class of Dealers was naturally regarded with
-suspicion by shopkeepers. A pamphlet demanding their suppression, points
-out that “the poor decaying Shopkeeper has a large Rent to pay, and
-Family to Support; he maintains not his own Children only, but all the
-poor Orphans and Widows in his Parish; nay, sometimes the Widows and
-Orphans of the very Pedlar or Hawker, who has thus fatally laboured to
-starve him.” As for the Hawkers, “we know they pretend they are shut out
-of the great Trading Cities, Towns and Corporations by the respective
-Charters and all other settled Privileges of those Places, but we answer
-that tho’ for want of legal Introduction they may not be able to set up
-in Cities, Corporations, etc., yet there are very many Places of very
-great Trade, where no Corporation Privileges would obstruct them ... if
-any of them should be reduc’d and ... be brought to the Parish to keep;
-that is to say, their Wives and Children, the Manufacturers, the
-Shopkeepers who confessedly make up the principal Numbers of those
-corporations, and are the chief Supporters of the Parishes, will be much
-more willing to maintain them, than to be ruin’d by them.”[444]
-
-Footnote 444:
-
- _Brief State of the Inland and Home Trade._, pp. 59 and 63, 1730.
-
-The terms Badging, Peddling, Hawking and Regrating are not very clearly
-defined, and were used in senses which somewhat overlap each other; but
-the Badger seems to have been a person who “dealt” in a wholesale way. A
-licence was granted in 1630 to “Edith Doddington of Hilbishopps,
-widdowe, to be a badger of butter and cheese and to carry the same into
-the Counties of Wiltes, Hamsher, Dorsᵗᵗ and Devon, and to retourne
-againe with corne and to sell it againe in any faire or markett within
-this County during one whole yeare now next ensueing; and she is not to
-travell with above three horses, mares or geldings at the most
-part.”[445] The authorities, fearing lest corners and profiteering
-should result from interference with the supply of necessaries, made
-“ingrossing” or anything resembling an attempt to buy up the supply of
-wheat, salt, etc., an offence. Amongst the prosecutions which were made
-on this account are presentments of “John Whaydon and John Preist of
-Watchett, partners, for ingross of salt, Julia Stone, Richard Miles,
-Joane Miles als. Stone of Bridgwater for ingross of salte.”[446] of
-“Johann Stedie of Fifehead, widdow, ... for ingrossinge of corne
-contrary etc,”[447] of “Edith Bruer and Katherine Bruer, Spinsters, of
-Halse ... for ingrossinge of corne,”[448] and of “Johann Thorne ...
-widow ... for ingrossinge of wheate, Barley, Butter and Cheese.”[449]
-
-Footnote 445:
-
- _Somerset Q.S. Records_, Vol. II., p. 119, 1630.
-
-Footnote 446:
-
- _Ibid._ Vol. II., p. 153, 1631.
-
-Footnote 447:
-
- _Ibid._ Vol. II., p. 161.
-
-Footnote 448:
-
- _Ibid._ Vol. II., p. 165.
-
-Footnote 449:
-
- _Somerset Q.S. Records_, Vol. II., p. 223.
-
-Pedlars and hawkers carried on an extensive trade all over the country.
-At first sight this would seem a business ill suited to women, for it
-involved carrying a heavy pack of goods on the back over long distances;
-and yet it appears as though in some districts the trade was almost
-their monopoly. The success that attended Joan Dant’s efforts as a
-pedlar has been told elsewhere.[450] How complete was the ascendency
-which women had established in certain districts over this class of
-trade is shown by the following definition of the term “Hawkers”:—“those
-that profer their Wares by Wholesale which are called Hawkers, and which
-are not only the Manufacturers themselves, but others besides them, viz.
-the Women in _London_, in _Exceter_ and in _Manchester_, who do not only
-Profer Commodities at the Shops and Ware houses, but also at Inns to
-Countrey-Chapmen. Likewise the _Manchester_-men, the _Sherborn_-men, and
-many others, that do Travel from one Market-Town to another; and there
-at some Inn do profer their Wares to sell to the Shopkeepers of the
-place.”[451]
-
-Footnote 450:
-
- _Ante_, p. 33.
-
-Footnote 451:
-
- _Trade of England_, p. 21, 1681.
-
-Though peddling might in some cases be developed into a large and
-profitable concern, more often it afforded a bare subsistence. The
-character of a woman engaged in it is given in a certificate brought
-before the Hertford Quarter Sessions in 1683 by the inhabitants of
-Epping, which states that “Sarah, wife of Richard Young, of Epping,
-cooper, who was accused of pocket-picking when she was about her lawfull
-and honest imploy of buying small wares and wallnuts” at Sabridgworth
-fair, is “a very honest and well-behaved woman, not given to pilfer or
-steale,” and that they believe her to be falsely accused.[452]
-
-Footnote 452:
-
- _Hertfordshire County Records_, Vol. I., pp. 347-8.
-
-While the Pedlar dealt chiefly in small wares and haberdashery,
-Regraters were concerned with the more perishable articles of food. In
-this they were seriously hampered by bye-laws forbidding the buying and
-selling of such articles in one day. The laws had been framed with the
-object of preventing a few persons buying up all the supplies in the
-market and selling them at exorbitant prices, but their application
-seems to have been chiefly directed in the interests of the shopkeepers,
-to whom the competition of women who hawked provisions from door to door
-was a serious matter, the women being contented with very small profits,
-and the housewives finding it so convenient to have goods brought to
-their very doorstep. The injustice of the persecution of these poor
-women is protested against by the writer of a pamphlet, who points out
-that “We provide Men shall not be cheated in buying a pennyworth of
-Eggs, but make no provision to secure them from the same Abuse in a
-hundred pounds laid out in Cloaths. The poor Artizan shall not be
-oppressed in laying out his penny to one poorer than himself, but is
-without Remedy, shortened by a Company in his Penny as it comes in. I
-have heard Complaints of this Nature in greater matters of the publik
-Sales of the _East India Company_, perhaps if due consideration were had
-of these great Ingrossers, there would be found more Reason to restrain
-them, than a poor Woman that travels in the Country to buy up and sell
-in a Market a few Hens and Chickens.”[453]
-
-Footnote 453:
-
- _Linnen and Woollen Manufactury_, p. 7, 1681.
-
-Even in the Middle Ages the trade of Regrating was almost regarded as
-the prerogative of women. Gower wrote “But to say the truth in this
-instance, the trade of regratery belongeth by right rather to women. But
-if a woman be at it she in stinginess useth much more machination and
-deceit than a man; for she never alloweth the profit on a single crumb
-to escape her, nor faileth to hold her neighbour to paying his price;
-all who beseech her do but lose their time, for nothing doth she by
-courtesy, as anyone who drinketh in her house knoweth well.”[454]
-
-Footnote 454:
-
- Gower, _Le mirour de l’omme_ (trans. from French verse by Eileen
- Power).
-
-In later times the feminine form of the word is used in the ordinances
-of the City of London, clearly showing that the persons who were then
-carrying on the trade were women; thus it was said “Let no Regrateress
-pass _London Bridge_ towards _Suthwerk_, nor elsewhere, to buy Bread, to
-carry it into the City of _London_ to sell; because the Bakers of
-_Suthwerk_, nor of any other Place, are not subject to the Justice of
-the City.” And again “Whereas it is common for merchants to give Credit,
-and especially for Bakers commonly to do the same with Regrateresses ...
-we forbid, that no Baker make the benefit of any Credit to a
-Regrateress, as long as he shall know her to be involved in her
-Neighbour’s Debt.”[455] Moreover a very large proportion of the
-prosecutions for this offence were against women. “We Amerce Thomas
-Bardsley for his wife buyinge Butter Contrary to the orders of the towne
-in xijid.”[456] “Katherine Birch for buyinge and selling pullen
-[chicken] both of one day 3s. Thos. Ravald wife of Assheton of Mercy
-bancke for sellinge butter short of waight.”[457] “Thomas Massey wife
-for buyinge a load of pease and sellinge them the same day. Amerced in
-1s.”[458] “Katharine Hall for buyinge and sellinge Cheese both of one
-day 6d. Anne Rishton for buyinge and sellinge butter the same day Amercd
-in 3. 0.”[459]
-
-Footnote 455:
-
- Stow, _London_, Book V., p. 343. Assize of Bread.
-
-Footnote 456:
-
- _Manchester Court Leet Records_, Vol. IV., p. 110, 1653.
-
-Footnote 457:
-
- _Ibid._ p. 212, 1657.
-
-Footnote 458:
-
- _Ibid._ p. 244, 1658.
-
-Footnote 459:
-
- _Manchester Court Test Records_, p. 243, 1658.
-
-As the Regrater dealt chiefly in food, her business is closely connected
-with the provision trades, but enough has been said here to indicate
-that of all retailing this was the form which most appealed to poor
-women, who were excluded from skilled trades and whose only other
-resource was spinning. The number of women in this unfortunate position
-was large, including as it did not only widows, whose families depended
-entirely upon their exertions, but also the wives of most of the men who
-were in receipt of day wages and had no garden or grazing rights. It has
-already been shown that wages, except perhaps in some skilled trades,
-were insufficient for the maintenance of a family. Therefore, when the
-mother of a young family could neither work in her husband’s trade nor
-provide her children with food by cultivating her garden or tending cows
-and poultry, she must find some other means to earn a little money. By
-wages she could seldom earn more than a penny or twopence a day and her
-food. Selling perishable articles of food from door to door presented
-greater chances of profit, and to this expedient poor women most often
-turned. In proportion as the trade was a convenience to the busy
-housewife, it became an unwelcome form of competition to the established
-shopkeepers, who, being influential in the Boroughs, could persecute and
-suppress the helpless, disorganised women who undersold them.
-
-
- C. _Provision Trades._
-
-Under this head are grouped the Bakers, Millers, Butchers and Fishwives,
-together with the Brewers, Inn-keepers and Vintners, the category
-embracing both those who produced and those who retailed the provisions
-in question.
-
-A large proportion both of the bread and beer consumed at this time was
-produced by women in domestic industry. The wages assessments show that
-on the larger farms the chief woman servant was expected both to brew
-and to bake, but the cottage folk in many cases cannot have possessed
-the necessary capital for brewing, and perhaps were wanting ovens in
-which to bake. Certainly in the towns both brewing and baking existed as
-trades from the earliest times. Though in many countries the grinding of
-corn has been one of the domestic occupations performed by women and
-slaves, in England women were saved this drudgery, for the toll of corn
-ground at the mill was an important item in the feudal lord’s revenue,
-and severe punishments were inflicted on those who ground corn
-elsewhere. The common bakehouse was also a monopoly of the feudal
-lord’s,[460] but his rights in this case were not carried so far as to
-penalize baking for domestic purposes.
-
-Footnote 460:
-
- Petronilla, Countess of Leicester, granted to Petronilla, daughter of
- Richard Roger’s son of Leicester and her heirs “all the suit of the
- men outside the Southgate aforesaid to bake at her bakehouse with all
- the liberties and free customs, saving my customary tenants who are
- bound to my bakehouses within the town of Leicester,” Bateson, (M.)
- _Records, Leicester_, Vol. I.; p. 10.
-
-It might be supposed that industries such as brewing and baking, which
-were so closely connected with the domestic arts pertaining to women,
-would be more extensively occupied by women than trades such as those of
-blacksmith or pewterer or butcher; but it will be shown that skill
-acquired domestically was not sufficient to establish a woman’s position
-in the world of trade, and that actually in the seventeenth century it
-was as difficult for her to become a baker as a butcher.
-
-_Baking._—After the decay of feudal privileges the trade of baking was
-controlled on lines similar to those governing other trades, but subject
-to an even closer supervision by the local authorities, owing to the
-fact that bread is a prime necessity of life. On this account its price
-was fixed by “the assize of bread.” The position of women in regard to
-the trade was also somewhat different, because while in other trades
-they possessed fewer facilities than men for acquiring technical
-experience, in this they learnt the art of baking as part of their
-domestic duties. Nevertheless, in the returns which give the names of
-authorised bakers, those of women do not greatly exceed in number the
-names which are given for other trades; of lists for the City of
-Chester, one gives thirty names of bakers, six being women, all widows,
-while another gives thirty-nine men and no women,[461] and a third
-twenty-six men and three women. The assistance which the Baker’s wife
-gave to her husband, however, was taken for granted. At Carlisle, the
-bye-laws provide that “noe Persons ... shall brew or bayk to sell but
-only freemen and thare wifes.”[462] And a rule at Beverley laid down
-that “no common baker or other baker called boule baker, their wives,
-servants, or apprentices, shall enter the cornmarket any Saturday for
-the future before 1 p.m. to buy any grain, nor buy wheat coming on
-Saturdays to market beyond 2 bushels for stock for their own house after
-the hour aforesaid.”[463]
-
-Footnote 461:
-
- _Harl. MSS._, 2054, fo. 44 and 45, 2105, fo. 301.
-
-Footnote 462:
-
- Ferguson, _Carlisle, Dormont Book_, p. 69, 1561.
-
-Footnote 463:
-
- _Beverley Town Documents_, pp. 39-40.
-
-A writer, who was appealing for an increase in the assize of bread,
-includes the wife’s work among the necessary costs of making a loaf;
-“Two shillings was allowed by the assize for all maner of charges in
-baking a quarter of wheate over and above the second price of wheate in
-the market,” but the writer declares that in Henry VII.’s time “the
-bakers ... might farre better cheape and with lesse charge of seruantes
-haue baked a quarter of Wheate, then now they can.” It was then allowed
-for “everie quarter of wheate baking, for furnace and wood vid. the
-Miller foure pence, for two journymen and two pages five-pence, for
-salt, yest, candle & sandbandes two pence, for himselfe, his house, his
-wife, his dog & his catte seven pence, and the branne to his
-advantage.”[464]
-
-Footnote 464:
-
- Powell, _Assize of Bread_, 1600.
-
-The baker’s wife figures also in account books, as transacting business
-for her husband. Thus the Carpenters’ Company “Resd of Lewes davys wyffe
-the baker a fyne for a license for John Pasmore the forren to sette upe
-a lytyll shed on his backsyde.”[465]
-
-Footnote 465:
-
- _Records of Worshipful Company of Carpenters_, Vol. IV., p. 69, 1554.
-
-Although conforming in general to the regulations for other trades,
-certain Boroughs retained the rights over baking which had been enjoyed
-by the Feudal Lord, the Portmote at Salford ordering that “Samell Mort
-shall surcease from beakinge sale bread by the first of May next upon
-the forfeit of 5ls except hee beake at the Comon beakehouse in
-Salford.”[466] In other towns the bakers were sufficiently powerful to
-enforce their own terms on the Borough. In York, for instance, the
-Corporation of Bakers, which became very rich, succeeded in excluding
-the country, or “boule bakers,” from the market, undertaking to sell
-bread at the same rates; but the monopoly once secured they declared it
-was impossible to produce bread at this price, and the magistrates
-allowed an advance.[467] In some cases bakers were required to take out
-licences, these being granted only to freemen and freewomen; in others
-they were formed into Companies, with rules of apprenticeship. “They
-shall receive no man into their saide company of bakeres, nor woman
-unles her husband have bene a free burges, and compound with Mr. Maior
-and the warden of the company.”[468] At Reading in 1624, “the bakers,
-vizt., William Hill, Abram Paise, Alexander Pether, complayne against
-bakers not freemen, vizt., Izaak Wracke useth the trade his wief did use
-when he marryed. Michaell Ebson saith he was an apprentice in towne and
-having noe worke doth a little to gett bread. James Arnold will
-surceasse ... Wydowe Bradbury alwayes hath used to bake.”[469]
-
-Footnote 466:
-
- _Salford Portmote Records_, Vol. II., p. 188.
-
-Footnote 467:
-
- _S.P.D._ cxxxiv., 36. November 27, 1622.
-
-Footnote 468:
-
- Lambert, _Two Thousand Years of Gild Life_, p. 307. _Composicion of
- Bakers, Hull._, 1598.
-
-Footnote 469:
-
- Guilding, _Reading Records_, Vol. II., p. 181.
-
-That women were members of the Bakers’ Companies is shown by rules which
-refer to sisters as well as brothers. In 1622 the Corporation at
-Salisbury ordained that “no free brother or free sister shall at any
-time hereafter make, utter, or sell bread, made with butter, or milk,
-spice cakes, etc ... except it be before spoken for funerals, or upon
-the Friday before Easter, or at Christmas.... No free brother or free
-sister shall sell any bread in the market. No free brother or free
-sister shall hereafter lend any money to an innholder or victualler, to
-the intent or purpose of getting his or their custom.”[470] It is not
-likely that many women served an apprenticeship, but the frequency with
-which they are charged with offences against the Bye-Laws is some clue
-to the numbers engaged in the trade. For instance, in Manchester, Martha
-Wrigley and nine men were presented in 1648 “for makeinge bread above &
-vnder the size & spice bread.”[471] In 1650, twenty-five men and no
-women were charged with a similar offence,[472] in 1651 eleven men and
-no women[473] and in 1652 are entered the names of five men and ten
-women[474].
-
-Footnote 470:
-
- Hoare, (Sir. R. C.). _Hist. of Wiltshire_, Vol. VI., p. 342.
-
-Footnote 471:
-
- _Manchester Court Leet Records_, Vol. IV., p. 31.
-
-Footnote 472:
-
- _Ibid._ p. 47.
-
-Footnote 473:
-
- _Ibid._ p. 51.
-
-Footnote 474:
-
- _Manchester Court Leet Records_, p. 70.
-
-The constant complaints brought against people who were using the trade
-“unlawfully” show how difficult it was to enforce rules of
-apprenticeship in a trade which was so habitually used by women for
-domestic purposes. Information was brought that “divers of the inhabᵗˢ
-of Thirsk do use the trade of baking, not having been apprentices
-thereof, but their wives being brought up and exercised therein many
-yeares have therefore used it ... and the matter referred to the
-Justices in Qʳ Sessions to limitt a certain number to use that trade
-without future trouble of any informers and that such as are allowed by
-the said Justices, to have a tolleration to take apprentices ... the
-eight persons, viz., Jaˢ. Pibus, Anth. Gamble, John Harrison, Widow
-Watson, Jane Skales, Jane Rutter, Tho. Carter and John Bell, shall onlie
-use and occupie the said trade of baking, and the rest to be
-restrayned.”[475] The insistence upon apprenticeship must have been
-singularly exasperating to women who had learnt to bake excellent bread
-from their mothers, or mistresses, and it was natural for them to evade,
-when possible, a rule which seemed so arbitrary; but they could not do
-so with impunity. Thus the Hertfordshire Quarter Session was informed
-“One Andrew Tomson’s wife doth bake, and William Everite’s wife doth
-bake bread to sell being not apprenticed nor licensed.”[476] How heavily
-prosecutions of this character weighed upon the poor, is shown by a
-certificate brought to the same Quarter Sessions nearly a hundred years
-later, stating that “William Pepper, of Sabridgworth, is of honest and
-industrious behaviour, but in a poor and low condition, and so not able
-to support the charge of defending an indictment against him for baking
-for hire (he having once taken a halfpenny for baking a neighbour’s
-loaf) and has a great charge of children whom he has hitherto brought up
-to hard work and industrious labour, who otherwise might have been a
-charge to the parish, and will be forced to crave the relief of the
-parish, to defray the charge that may ensue upon this trouble given him
-by a presentment.”[477]
-
-Footnote 475:
-
- Atkinson, (J. C.), _Yorks. N. R. Q.S. Records_, Vol. I., p. 81. July
- 8, 1607.
-
-Footnote 476:
-
- _Hertford Co. Records_, Vol. I, p. 32, 1600.
-
-Footnote 477:
-
- _Hertford County Records_, Vol. I., p. 365, 1686.
-
-The line taken by the authorities was evidently intended to keep the
-trade of baking in a few hands. The object may have been partly to
-facilitate inspection and thereby check short measure and adulteration;
-whatever the motive the effect must certainly have tended to discourage
-women from developing the domestic art of baking into a trade.
-Consequently in this, as in other trades, the woman’s contribution to
-the industry generally took the form of a wife helping her husband, or a
-widow carrying on her late husband’s business.
-
-_Millers_:—It was probably only as the wife or widow of a miller that
-women took part in the business of milling. An entry in the Carlisle
-Records states “we amercye Archilles Armstronge for keeping his wief to
-play the Milner, contrary the orders of this cyttie.”[478] But it is not
-unusual to come across references to corn mills which were in the hands
-of women; a place in Yorkshire is described as being “near to Mistress
-Lovell’s Milne.”[479] “Margaret Page, of Hertingfordbury, widow,” was
-indicted for “erecting a mill house in the common way there,”[480] and
-at Stockton “One water corne milne ... is lett by lease unto Alice
-Armstrong for 3 lives.”[481]
-
-Footnote 478:
-
- Ferguson, _Carlisle_, p. 278. April 21, 1619.
-
-Footnote 479:
-
- J. C. Atkinson, _Yorks. N. R. Q.S. Records_, Vol. II., p. 8, 1612.
-
-Footnote 480:
-
- _Hertford County Records_, Vol. II., p. 25, 1698.
-
-Footnote 481:
-
- Brewster, _Stockton-on-Tees_, p. 42.
-
-Such instances are merely a further proof of the activity shown by
-married women in the family business whenever this was carried on within
-their reach.
-
-_Butchers_:—The position which women took in the Butchers’ trade
-resembled very closely their position as bakers, for, as has been shown,
-the special advantages which women, by virtue of their domestic
-training, might have enjoyed when trading as bakers, were cancelled by
-the statutes and bye-laws limiting the numbers of those engaged in this
-trade. As wife or widow women were able to enter either trade equally.
-Both trades were subject to minute supervision in the interests of the
-public, and as a matter of fact, from the references which happen to
-have been preserved, it might even appear that the wives of butchers
-were more often interested in the family business than the wives of
-bakers. An Act of Henry VIII. “lycensyng all bochers for a tyme to sell
-vytell in grosse at theyr pleasure” makes it lawful for any person “to
-whom any complaynt shuld be made upon any Boucher his wyff servaunte or
-other his mynysters refusing to sell the said vitayles by true and
-lawfull weight ... to comytt evry such Boucher to warde,”[482] shows an
-expectation that the wife would act as her husband’s agent. But the
-wife’s position was that of partner, not servant. During the first half
-of the century, certainly, leases were generally made conjointly to
-husband and wife; for example, “Phillip Smith and Elizabeth, his wife”
-appeared before the Corporation at Reading “desiringe a new lease of the
-Butcher’s Shambles, which was granted.”[483]
-
-Footnote 482:
-
- Statutes 27, Henry VIII., c. 9.
-
-Footnote 483:
-
- Guilding, _Reading Records_, Vol. IV., p. 122.
-
-Customs at Nottingham secured the widow’s possession of her husband’s
-business premises even without a lease, providing that “when anie
-Butcher shall dye thatt holds a stall or shopp from the towne, thatt
-then his wyefe or sonne shall hould the same stall or shopp, they vsinge
-the same trade, otherwaies the towne to dispose thereof to him or them
-thatt will give moste for the stall or shopp: this order to bee lykewise
-to them thatt houlds a stall in the Spice-chambers.”[484]
-
-Footnote 484:
-
- _Nottingham Records_, Vol. V., p. 284, 1654.
-
-The names of women appear in lists of butchers in very similar
-proportions to the lists of bakers. Thus one for Chester gives the names
-of twenty men followed by three women,[485] and in a return of sixteen
-butchers licensed to sell meat in London during Lent, there is one
-woman, Mary Wright, and her partner, William Woodfield.[486] Bye-laws
-which control the sale of meat use the feminine as well as the masculine
-pronouns, showing that the trade was habitually used by both sexes. The
-“Act for the Settlement and well ordering of the several Public Markets
-within the City of London” provides that “all and every Country butcher
-... Poulterer ... Country Farmers, Victuallers Laders or Kidders ... may
-there sell, utter and put to open shew or sale his, her or their Beef,
-Mutton, etc., etc.”[487] It may be supposed that these provisions relate
-only to the sale of meat, and that women would not often be associated
-with the businesses which included slaughtering the beasts, but this is
-not the case. Elizabeth Clarke is mentioned in the Dorchester Records as
-“apprenticed 7 years to her father a butcher,”[488] and other references
-occur to women who were clearly engaged in the genuine butcher’s trade.
-For example, a licence was granted “to Jane Fouches of the Parish of St.
-Clement Danes, Butcher to kill and sell flesh during Lent,”[489] and
-among eighteen persons who were presented at the Court Leet, Manchester,
-“for Cuttinge & gnashing of Rawhides for their seuerall Gnashinge of
-evry Hyde,” two were women, “Ellen Jaques of Ratchdale, one hyde, Widdow
-namely Stott of Ratchdale, two hydes.”[490]
-
-Footnote 485:
-
- _Harl. MSS._, 2105 fo., 300 b., 1565.
-
-Footnote 486:
-
- _S.P.D._ cxix. 107., February 24, 1621.
-
-Footnote 487:
-
- _Act for the Settlement and well Ordering of the Several Publick
- Markets within the City of London_, 1674.
-
-Footnote 488:
-
- Mayo, _Municipal Records of Dorchester_, p. 428, 1698.
-
-Footnote 489:
-
- _S.P.D._ 1. clxxxviii., James I., undated.
-
-Footnote 490:
-
- _Manchester Court Leet Records_, Vol. V., p. 236, 1674.
-
-Beside these women, who by marriage or apprenticeship had acquired the
-full rights of butchers and were acknowledged as such by the Corporation
-under whose governance they lived, a multitude of poor women tried to
-keep their families from starvation by hawking meat from door to door.
-They are often mentioned in the Council Records, because the very nature
-of their business rendered them continually liable to a prosecution for
-regrating. Thus at the Court Leet, Manchester, Anne Costerdyne was fined
-1s. “for buyinge 4 quarters of Mutton of Wᵐ. Walmersley & 1 Lamb of
-Thomas Hulme both wᶜʰ shee shold the one & same day.”[491] Their
-position was the more difficult, because if they did not sell the meat
-the same day sometimes it went bad, and they were then prosecuted on
-another score. Elizabeth Chorlton, a butcher’s widow, was presented in
-1648 “for buieing and sellinge both on one day” and was fined 3s.
-4d.[492] She was again fined with Mary Shalcross and various men in 1650
-for selling unlawful meat and buying and selling on one day.[493]
-
-Footnote 491:
-
- _Ibid._ p. 221, 1674.
-
-Footnote 492:
-
- _Manchester Court Leet Records_, Vol. IV., p. 31.
-
-Footnote 493:
-
- _Ibid._ p. 40.
-
-She was presented yet again in 1653 for selling “stinking meate,” and
-fined 5s.[494] Evidently Elizabeth Chorlton was an undesirable
-character, for she had previously been convicted of selling by false
-weights;[495] nevertheless it seems hard that when it was illegal to
-sell stinking meat women should also be fined for selling it on the same
-day they bought it, and though this particular woman was dishonest no
-fault is imputed to the character of many of the others who were
-similarly presented for regrating.
-
-Footnote 494:
-
- _Manchester Court Leet Records_, Vol. IV., p. 68.
-
-Footnote 495:
-
- _Ibid._ p. 15, 1648.
-
-There remains yet another class of women who were connected with the
-Butchers’ trade, namely the wives of men who were either employed by the
-master butchers, or who perhaps earned a precarious living by
-slaughtering pigs and other beasts destined for domestic consumption. In
-such work there was no place for the wife’s assistance, and, like other
-wage-earners, in spite of any efforts she might make in other
-directions, the family remained below the poverty line. An instance may
-be quoted from the Norwich Records where, in a census of the poor (i.e.
-persons needing Parish Relief) taken in 1570, are given the names of
-“John Hubbard of the age of 38 yeres, butcher, that occupie slaughterie,
-and Margarit his wyfe of the age of 30 yeres that sell souce, and 2
-young children, and have dwelt here ever.”[496]
-
-Footnote 496:
-
- Tingey, J. C., _Records of the City of Norwich_, Vol. II., p. 337.
-
-_Fishwives._—There is no reason to suppose that women were often engaged
-in the larger transactions of fishmongers. Indeed an English writer,
-describing the Dutchwomen who were merchants of fish, expressly says
-that they were a very different class from the women who sold fish in
-England, and who were commonly known as fisherwives.[497] Nevertheless
-that in this, as in other trades, they shared to some extent in their
-husband’s enterprises, is shown by the presentment of “John Frank of New
-Malton, and Alice his wife, for forestalling the markett of divers
-paniers of fishe, buying the same of the fishermen of Runswick or
-Whitbye ... before it came into the markett.”[498]
-
-Footnote 497:
-
- Ante., p. 36.
-
-Footnote 498:
-
- Atkinson, J. C. _Yorks. N. R. Q.S. Records_, Vol. I., p. 121, 1698.
-
-The position of the sisters of the Fishmongers’ Company, London, was
-recognised to the extent of providing them with a livery, an ordinance
-of 1426 ordaining that every year, on the festival of St. Peter, “alle
-the brethren and sustern of the same fratʳnite” should go in their new
-livery to St. Peters’ Church, Cornhill.[499] An ordinance dated 1499
-however, requires that no fishmonger of the craft shall suffer his wife,
-or servant, to stand in the market to sell fish, unless in his
-absence.[500] An entry in the Middlesex Quarter Sessions Records notes
-the “discharge of Sarah, daughter of Frances Hall. Apprenticed to
-Rebecca Osmond of the Parish of St. Giles’ Without, Cripplegate,
-‘fishwoman’.”[501] A member of the important Fishmongers’ Company would
-hardly be designated in this way, and Rebecca Osmond must be classed
-among the “Fishwives” who are so often alluded to in accounts of London.
-Their business was often too precarious to admit of taking apprentices,
-and their credit so low that a writer in the reign of Charles I., who
-advocated the establishment of “Mounts of Piety” speaks of the high rate
-of interest taken by brokers and pawn-brokers “above 400 in the hundred”
-from “fishwives, oysterwomen and others that do crye thinges up and
-downe the streets.”[502] It was in this humble class of trade rather
-than in the larger transactions of fishmongers, that women were chiefly
-engaged. In London no impediments seem to have been placed in the way of
-their business, but in the provinces they, like the women who hawked
-meat, were persecuted under the bye-laws against regrating. At
-Manchester, the wife of John Wilshawe was amerced “for buyinge Sparlings
-[smelts] and sellinge them the same day in 6d.”[503], while at the same
-court others were fined for selling unmarketable fish.
-
-Footnote 499:
-
- Herbert, _Livery Companies of London_, Vol. II., p. 44.
-
-Footnote 500:
-
- _Ibid._ Vol. II., p. 35.
-
-Footnote 501:
-
- _Middlesex County Records_, p. 160, 1696.
-
-Footnote 502:
-
- _A Project for Mounts of Piety, Lansdowne MSS._, 351 fo., 18b.
-
-Footnote 503:
-
- _Manchester Court Leet Records_, Vol. IV., p. 112, 1654.
-
-_Brewers_:—It has been shown that the position which women occupied
-among butchers and bakers did not differ materially from their position
-in other trades; that is to say, the wife generally helped her husband
-in his business, and carried it on after his death; but the history of
-brewing possesses a peculiar interest, for apparently the art of brewing
-was at one time chiefly, if not entirely, in the hands of women. This is
-indicated by the use of the feminine term brewster. Possibly the use of
-the masculine or feminine forms may never have strictly denoted the sex
-of the person indicated in words such as brewer, brewster, spinner,
-spinster, sempster, sempstress, webber, webster, and the gradual disuse
-of the feminine forms may have been due to the grammatical tendencies in
-the English language rather than to the changes which were driving women
-from their place in productive industry; but the feminine forms would
-never have arisen in the first place unless women had been engaged to
-some extent in the trades to which they refer, and it often happens that
-the use of the feminine pronoun in relation to the term “brewster” and
-even “brewer” shows decisively that female persons are indicated. At
-Beverley a bye-law was made in 1364 ordaining that “if any of the
-community abuse the affeerers of Brewster-gild for their affeering, in
-words or otherwise, he shall pay ... to the community 6s. 8d.”[504] In
-this case Brewster might no more imply a woman’s trade than it does in
-the modern term “Brewster-Sessions,” but in 1371 a gallon of beer was
-ordered to “be sold for 1½d. ... and if any one offer 1½d. for a gallon
-of beer anywhere in Beverley and the ale-wife will not take it, that the
-purchaser come to the Gild Hall and complain of the brewster, and a
-remedy shall be found,”[505] while a rule made in 1405 orders that “no
-brewster or female seller called tipeler” shall “permit strangers to
-remain after 9 p.m.”[506] Similar references occur in the Records of
-other Boroughs. At Bury the Customs provided in 1327 that “if a woman
-Brewer (Braceresse) can acquit herself with her sole hand that she has
-not sold contrary to the assize [of ale] she shall be quit”[507]; at
-Torksey “when women are asked whether they brew and sell beer outside
-their houses contrary to the assize or no, if they say no, they shall
-have a day at the next court to make their law with the third hand, with
-women who live next door on either side or with others.”[508]
-
-Footnote 504:
-
- _Beverley Town Documents_, p. 41.
-
-Footnote 505:
-
- _Ibid._ p. 41.
-
-Footnote 506:
-
- _Ibid._ p. lv.
-
-Footnote 507:
-
- Bateson, (M.), _Borough Customs_, Vol. I., p. 185.
-
-Footnote 508:
-
- _Ibid._ Vol. I., p. 185, 1345.
-
-It was ordered at Leicester in 1335 that “no breweress, sworn inn-keeper
-or other shall be so bold as to brew except (at the rate of) a gallon of
-the best for 1d,”[509] and though the feminine form of the noun has been
-dropped, the feminine pronoun is still used in 1532 when “hytt is
-enacteyd yᵃᵗ no brwar yᵃᵗ brwys to sell, sell aboffe iid the gallan &
-sche schall typill be no mesure butt to sell be yᵉ dossyn & yᵉ halfe
-dossyn.”[510]
-
-Footnote 509:
-
- Bateson, (M.), _Records of Leicester_, Vol. II., p. 21.
-
-Footnote 510:
-
- Bateson, (M.), _Records of Leicester_, Vol. III., p. 33.
-
-The exclusive use of the feminine in these bye-laws differs from the
-expressions used in regard to other trades when both the masculine and
-feminine pronouns are habitually employed, suggesting that the trade of
-brewing was on a different basis.
-
-It must be remembered that before the introduction of cheap sugar, beer
-was considered almost equally essential for human existence as bread.
-Beer was drunk at every meal, and formed part of the ordinary diet of
-even small children. Large households brewed for their own use, but as
-many families could not afford the necessary apparatus, brewing was not
-only practised as a domestic art, but became the trade of certain women
-who brewed for their neighbours. It is interesting to note the steps
-which led to their ultimate exclusion from the trade, though many links
-in the chain of evidence are unfortunately missing. In 1532 brewers in
-Leicester are referred to as “sche,” but an Act published in 1574 shows
-that the trade had already emerged from petticoat government. It
-declares that “No inhabitantes what soeuer that nowe doe or hereafter
-shall in theire howsses vse tiplinge and sellinge of ale or beare, shall
-not brewe the same of theare owne, but shall tunne in the same of the
-common brewars therfore appoynted; and none to be common brewars but
-such as nowe doe vse the same, ... and non of the said common brewars to
-sell, or ... to tipple ale or beare by retayle ... the Brewars shall
-togeyther become a felloweship. etc.”[511] This separation of brewing
-from the sale of beer was a policy pursued by the government with the
-object of simplifying the collection of excise, but it was also defended
-as a means for maintaining the quality of the beer brewed. It was
-ordayned in the Assize for Brewers, Anno 23, H. 8, that “Forasmuch as
-the misterie of brewing as a thing very needfull and necessarie for the
-common wealth, hath been alwaies by auncient custom & good orders
-practised & maintained within Citties, Corporate Boroughs and market
-Townes of this Realm, by such expert and skilfull persons, as eyther
-were traded and brought up therein, by the space of seuen yeares, and as
-prentizes therin accepted: accordingly as in all other Trades and
-occupations, or else well knowne to be such men of skill and honestie,
-in that misterie, as could and would alwaie yeeld unto her Maiesties
-subiects in the commonwealth, such good and holsome Ale and Beere, as
-both in the qualitie & for the quantitie thereof, did euer agree with
-the good lawes of the Realme. And especiallie to the comfort of the
-poorer sort of subiectes, who most need it, untill of late yeares,
-sondrie persons ... rather seeking their owne private gaine, then the
-publike profite of their countrie, haue not onelie erected and set uppe
-small brewhouses at their pleasures: but also brew and utter such Ales
-and Beere, for want of skill in that misterie as both in the prices &
-holesomnes thereof, doth utterlie disagree with the good lawes and
-orders of this Realm; thereby also ouerthrowing the greater and more
-auncient brewhouses.” It is therefore recommended that these modern
-brewhouses should be suppressed in the interest of the old and better
-ones.[512]
-
-Footnote 511:
-
- _Ibid._ Vol. III., p. 153.
-
-Footnote 512:
-
- Powell, John. _The Assize of Bread._
-
-The argument reads curiously when one reflects how universal had been
-the small brewhouses in former days. The advantages from the excise
-point of view which would be gained by the concentration of the trade in
-a few hands is discussed in a pamphlet which remarks that “there is much
-Mault made in private Families, in some Counties half, if not two thirds
-of the Maults spent, are privately made, and undoubtedly as soon as an
-Imposition is laid upon it, much more will, for the advantage they shall
-gain by saving the Excise ... if Mault could be forbidden upon a great
-penalty to be made by any persons, but by certain publick Maulsters,
-this might be of availe to increase the Excise.”[513] The actual
-conditions prevailing in the brewing industry at this time are described
-as follows in another pamphlet. Brewers are divided into two classes,
-“The Brewer who brews to sell by great measures, and wholly serves other
-Families by the same; which sort of Brewers are only in some few great
-Cities and Towns, not above twenty through the land.... The Brewers who
-brews to sell by retail ... this sort of Brewers charges almost only
-such as drink the same in those houses where the same is brewed and sold
-... and therefore supplies but a small proportion of the rest of the
-land, being that in almost all Market Towns, Villages, Hamlets, and
-private houses in the Countrey throughout the land, all the Inhabitants
-brew for themselves, at least by much the greatest proportion of what
-they use.”[514]
-
-Footnote 513:
-
- _Considerations Touching the Excise_, p. 7.
-
-Footnote 514:
-
- Rockley, Francis.
-
-In order to extend and strengthen their monopoly the “Common Brewers”
-brought forward a scheme in 1620, asking for a certain number of common
-brewers to be licensed throughout the kingdom, to brew according to
-assize. All other inn-keepers, alehouse keepers and victuallers to be
-forbidden to brew, “these brew irregularly without control,” and
-“offering to pay the King 4d. on every quart of malt brewed.” The scheme
-was referred to the Council who recommended “that a proclamation be
-issued forbidding ‘taverners, inn-keepers, etc. to sell any beer but
-such as they buy from the brewers.’” To the objections “that brewers who
-were free by service or otherwise to use the trade of brewing would
-refuse to take a licence, and when apprentices had served their time
-there would be many who might do so,” it was replied that it was “not
-usual for Brewers to take any apprentices but hired servants and the
-stock necessary for the trade is such as few apprentices can
-furnish.”[515] Thus the rise of the “common brewer” signalises the
-complete victory of capitalistic organisation in the brewing trade. In
-1636 Commissioners were appointed to “compound with persons who wished
-to follow the trade of common Brewers throughout the Kingdom.”[516] The
-next year returns were received by the Council, giving the names and
-other particulars of those concerned in various districts. The list for
-the “Fellowshipp of Brewers now living in Newcastle-upon-Tyne with the
-breath and depth of their severall mash tunns” gives the names of
-fifty-three men and three women, widows.[517] A list of such brewers in
-the County of Essex “as have paid their fines and are bound to pay their
-rent accordingly”[518] (i.e. were licensed by the King’s Commissioners
-for brewing) includes sixty-three men and four women, while the names of
-one hundred and twenty-four men and eight women are given in other
-tables containing the amounts due from brewers and maultsters in certain
-other counties,[519] showing that the predominance of women in the
-brewing trade had then disappeared, the few names appearing in the lists
-being no doubt those of brewers’ widows.
-
-Footnote 515:
-
- _S.P.D._, cxii., 75., February 9, 1620.
-
-Footnote 516:
-
- _C. R._ November 9, 1636.
-
-Footnote 517:
-
- _S.P.D._ ccclxxvii., 62, 1637.
-
-Footnote 518:
-
- _S.P.D._ ccclxxvii., 64, 1637.
-
-Footnote 519:
-
- _S.P.D._ ccclxxxvii., 66.
-
-The creation of the common brewers’ monopoly was very unpopular. At Bury
-St. Edmunds a petition was presented by “a great no. of poor people” to
-the Justices of Assize, saying that for many years they had been
-relieved “by those inn-keepers which had the liberty to brew their beer
-in their own houses, not only with money and food, but also at the
-several times of their brewing (being moved with pity and compassion,
-knowing our great extremities and necessities) with such quantities of
-their small beer as has been a continual help and comfort to us with our
-poor wives and children: yet of late the common brewers, whose number is
-small and their benefits to us the poor as little notwithstanding in
-their estate they are wealthy and occupy great offices of malting, under
-pretence of doing good to the commonwealth, have for their own lucre and
-gain privately combined themselves, and procured orders from the Privy
-Council that none shall brew in this town but they and their
-adherents.”[520] At Tiverton the Council was obliged to make a
-concession to popular feeling and agreed that “every person being a
-freeman of the town and not prohibited by law might use the trade of
-Common Brewer as well as the four persons formerly licensed by the
-Commissioners,” but the petition that the alehouse keepers and
-inn-keepers might brew as formerly they used was refused, “they might
-brew for their own and families use; otherwise to buy from the Common
-Brewers.”[521]
-
-Footnote 520:
-
- _Hist. MSS. Com._, 14 Rep. App., VIII., p. 142.
-
-Footnote 521:
-
- _C. R._ June 12, 1640. Order concerning the Brewers of Tiverton.
-
-The monopoly involved the closing of many small businesses. Sarah Kemp a
-widow, petitioned the Council because she had “been forced to give up
-brewing in Whitefriars, and had been at gᵗ loss both in removing her
-implements and in her rents,” asking “that in consideration of her loss
-she might have license to erect brick houses on her messuage in
-Whitefriars.” This was granted on conditions.[522] A married woman, Mary
-Arnold, was committed to the Fleet on March 31st, 1639, “for continuing
-to brew in a house on the Millbank in Westminster, contrary to an order
-against the brewers in Westminster and especially against Michael
-Arnold.” The Council ordered her to be discharged, on her humble
-admission to brew no more in the said house, but to remove within ten
-days; and on bond from her husband that neither he nor she nor any other
-shall brew in the said house, and that he will remove his brewing
-vessels within ten days.[523]
-
-Footnote 522:
-
- _C. R._ 22nd March, 1638-9.
-
-Footnote 523:
-
- _C. R._ May 8, 1639.
-
-The closing of the trade of brewing to women must have seriously reduced
-their opportunities for earning an independance; that they had hitherto
-been extensively engaged in it is shown by frequent references to women
-who were brewsters; for example, Mrs. Putland was rated 5s. on her
-brew-house;[524] Jennet Firbank, wife of Steph. Firbank, of Awdbroughe,
-a recusant, was presented at Richmond for brewing, a side note adding
-“she to be put down from brueing.”[525] Margaret, the wife of Ambrose
-Carleton and Marye Barton were presented at Carlisle for “brewing (being
-foryners) and therefore we doe emercye either of them viˢ 8d.”[526] At
-Thirske, Widow Harrington, of Hewton, Chr. Whitecake, of Bransbie, Rob.
-Goodricke, of the same (for his wife’s offence) were presented, all for
-brewing.[527] And at Malton, a few years later, “Rob. Driffeld, a
-brewster of Easingwold, was presented for suffering unlawful games att
-cardes to be used at unlawful times in the night in his house ... and
-the wife of the said Driffeld for that she will not sell anie of her ale
-forth of doores except it be to those whom she likes on and makes her
-ale of 2 or thre sortes, nor will let anie of her poore neighbours have
-anie of her drincke called small ale, but she saith she will rather give
-it to her Swyne then play it for them.”[528] Isabell Bagley and Janyt
-Lynsley “both of Cowburne bruesters” were fined 10s. each “for suffering
-play at cardes in their houses, &c,”[529] and at Norwich, Judith Bowde,
-brewer, was fined 2s. 9d.[530]
-
-Footnote 524:
-
- _Strood Churchwardens’ Accounts_, Add. MSS., 36937, p. 263., 1683.
-
-Footnote 525:
-
- Atkinson, (J. C.), _Yorks. N. R. Q.S. Records_, Vol. I., p. 95., 1607.
-
-Footnote 526:
-
- Ferguson, _Carlisle_, p. 280, _Court Leet Rolls_,. October 21, 1625.
-
-Footnote 527:
-
- Atkinson, (J. C.), _Yorks. N. R. Q.S. Records_, Vol. I., p. 159, 1609.
-
-Footnote 528:
-
- Atkinson, (J. C.), _Yorks. N. R. Q.S. Records_, Vol. II., pp. 53-54,
- 1614.
-
-Footnote 529:
-
- _Ibid._ Vol. I., p. 93, 1607.
-
-Footnote 530:
-
- Tingey, (J. C.), _Records of City of Norwich_, Vol. I., p. 388, 1676.
-
-Although women had lost their position in the brewing trade by the end
-of the seventeenth century, they were still often employed in brewing
-for domestic purposes. Sometimes one of the women servants on a large
-farm, brewed for the whole family, including all the farm servants.[531]
-In other cases a woman made her living by brewing for different families
-in their own houses. Thus in the account of a fire on the premises of a
-certain Mr. Reading it is described how his “Family were Brewing within
-this Place.... The Servants who were in the House perceiving a great
-smoak rose out of Bed, and the Maid running out cried Fire and said _Wo
-worth this Bookers wife_ (who was the Person whom Mr. _Reading_ imployed
-to be his Brewer) _she hath undone us_.”[532] Lady Grizell Baillie
-enters in her Household Account Book, “For Brewing 7 bolls Malt by Mrs.
-Ainsly 10s. For a ston hopes to the said Malt out of which I had a
-puntion very strong Ale 10 gallons good 2nd ale and four puntions of
-Beer. 14s.”[533]
-
-Footnote 531:
-
- Ante., p. 50.
-
-Footnote 532:
-
- _True Account how Mr. Reading’s House._
-
-Footnote 533:
-
- Baillie, Lady Grizell, _Household Book_. p. 91., 1714.
-
-Naturally the women who brewed for domestic purposes sometimes wished to
-turn an honest penny by selling beer to thirsty neighbours at Fairs and
-on Holidays, but attempts to do so were severely punished. Annes Nashe
-of Welling, was presented “for selling beer by small jugs at Woolmer
-Grene and for laying her donng in the highway leading from Stevenage to
-London.”[534] A letter to a Somerset Magistrate pleads for another
-offender:—“Good Mr. Browne, all happiness attend you. This poor woman is
-arrested with Peace proces for selling ale without lycense and will
-assure you shee hath reformed it and that upon the first warning of our
-officers ever since Easter last, which is our fayre tyme, when most
-commonly our poore people doe offend in that kinde; I pray you doe her
-what lawful kindness you may, and hope she will recompense you for your
-paynes, and I shall be ready to requite it in what I may, for if she be
-committed she is absolutely undone. Thus hoping of your favour I leave
-you to God and to this charitable work towards this poor woman. Your
-unfeined friend, Hum. Newman.”[535]
-
-Footnote 534:
-
- _Hertford County Records_, Vol. I., p. 68., 1641.
-
-Footnote 535:
-
- _Somerset Q.S. Records_, Vol. II., pp. 40-1, 1627.
-
-Though with the growth of capitalism and the establishment of a monopoly
-for “Common Brewers” women were virtually excluded from their old trade
-of brewing, they still maintained their position in the retail trade,
-their hold upon which was favoured by the same circumstances which
-turned their energies to the retail side of other businesses.
-
-A tendency was shown by public opinion to regard licences as suitable
-provision for invalids and widows who might otherwise require assistance
-from the rates. Thus an attempt made at Lincoln in 1628 to reduce the
-numbers of licences was modified, “for that it appeareth that divers
-poor men and widows, not freemen, have no other means of livelihood but
-by keeping of alehouses, it is agreed that such as shall be approved by
-the justices may be re-admitted, but that none hereafter be newly
-admitted untill they be first sworn freemen.”[536] According to a
-pamphlet published early in the next century, “Ale-houses were
-originally Accounted Neusances in the _Parish’s_ where they were, as
-tending to Debauch the Subject, and make the People idle, and therefore
-Licences to sell Beer and Ale, where allow’d to none, but Ancient People
-past their Labours, and Invalides to keep them from Starving, there
-being then no _Act of Parliament_ that _Parishes_ should Maintain their
-own Poor. But the Primitive Intention in granting Licences being now
-perverted, and all sorts of People Admitted to this priviledge, it is
-but reason the Publick should have some Advantage by the Priviledges it
-grants....”[537] Many examples of this attitude of mind can be observed
-in the Quarter Sessions Records. For instance, Mary Briggs when a widow
-was licensed by the Hertfordshire Quarter Sessions to sell drink, and by
-the good order she kept in her house and the goodness of the drink she
-uttered and sold she got a good livelihood, and brought up three
-children she had by a former husband. She married John Briggs, woodard
-and servant to Lord Ashton, she continuing her business and he his. Her
-husband was returned as a papist recusant, and on his refusing to take
-oaths the court suppressed their alehouse. Mrs. Briggs appealed on the
-ground that her business was carried on separately and by it she
-maintained her children by her former husband. Her claim was supported
-by a petition from her fellow parishioners, declaring that John Briggs
-was employed by Lord Ashton and “meddles not with his wife’s trade of
-victualling and selling drink.”[538] Other examples may be found in an
-order for the suppression of Wm. Brightfoot’s licence who had “by
-surprize” obtained one for selling beer ... showing that he was a young
-man, and capable to maintain his family without keeping an
-alehouse,[539] and the petition of John Phips, of Stondon, labourer,
-lately fallen into great need for want of work. He can get very little
-to do among his neighbours, “because they have little for him to do,
-having so many poore laborious men besides within the said parish.” He
-asks for a licence to sell beer “for his better livelihood and living
-hereafter, towards the mayntenance of himself, his poor wife and
-children.”[540] Licences were refused at Bristol to “John Keemis,
-Cooper, not fit to sell ale, having no child; he keeps a tapster which
-is no freeman that have a wife and child,” and also to “Richard Rooke,
-shipwright, not fit to sell ale, having no child, and brews themselves.”
-A Barber Surgeon was disqualified, having no child, “and also for
-entertaining a strange maid which is sick.”[541]
-
-Footnote 536:
-
- _Hist. MSS. Com._, 14 Rep., app. viii., p. 99, 1629.
-
-Footnote 537:
-
- Phipps, (Thomas), _Proposal for raising £1,000,000 Sterling yearly_.
-
-Footnote 538:
-
- _Hertford County Records_, Vol. I., p. 289, 1678.
-
-Footnote 539:
-
- _Middlesex Sessions Book_, p. 23, 1690.
-
-Footnote 540:
-
- _Hertford County Records_, Vol. I., p. 174, 1665.
-
-Footnote 541:
-
- Latimer, _Bristol_, p. 359, 1670. _Court Leet for St. Stephen’s
- Parish._
-
-Very rarely were doubts suggested as to the propriety of the trade for
-women, though a bye-law was passed at Chester ordaining that “no woman
-between the age of xiii & xl yeares shall kepe any taverne or
-ale-howse.”[542] At times complaints were made of the conduct of
-alewives, as in a request to the Justices of Nottingham “that your
-Worshipps wyll take some order wythe all the alewyfes in this towne, for
-we thinke that never an alewyfe dothe as hir husband is bownd to,”[543]
-but there is no evidence of any marked difference in the character of
-the alehouses kept by men and those kept by women. The trade included
-women of the most diverse characters. One, who received stolen goods at
-the sign of the “Leabord’s Head” in Ware, had there a “priviye place”
-for hiding stolen goods and suspicious persons “at the press for
-soldiers she hid five men from the constables, and can convey any man
-from chamber to chamber into the backside. There is not such a house for
-the purpose within a hundred miles.”[544] In contrast to her may be
-quoted the landlady of the Inn at Truro, of whom Celia Fiennes wrote,
-“My Greatest pleasure was the good Landlady I had, she was but an
-ordinary plaine woman but she was understanding in the best things as
-most—yᵉ Experience of reall religion and her quiet submission and
-self-Resignation to yᵉ will of God in all things, and especially in yᵉ
-placeing her in a remoteness to yᵉ best advantages of hearing, and being
-in such a publick Employment wᶜʰ she desired and aimed at yᵉ discharging
-so as to adorn yᵉ Gospel of her Lord and Saviour, and the Care of her
-children.”[545]
-
-Footnote 542:
-
- _Harl. MSS._, 2054 (4), fo., 6.
-
-Footnote 543:
-
- _Nottingham Records_, Vol. IV., p. 325, 1614.
-
-Footnote 544:
-
- _Hertford County Records_, Vol. I., p. 59, 1626.
-
-Footnote 545:
-
- Fiennes, (Celia), p. 226, _Through England on a Side-Saddle._
-
-_Vintners_:—The trade of the Vintner had no connection with that of the
-Brewer. Wine was sold in Taverns. In London the Vintners’ Company, like
-the other London Companies, possessed privileges which were continued to
-the wife upon her husband’s death, but women were probably not concerned
-in the trade on their own account. A survey of all the Taverns in London
-made in 1633 gives a total of 211, whereof six are licensed by His
-Majesty, 203 by the Vintners’ Company and two are licensed by neither,
-one is unlicensed, “inhabited by An Tither, whoe lately made a tavern of
-the Starr on Tower Hill where shee also keepes a victualling house
-unlicensed.” One licensed by the Earl of Middlesex. Amongst those duly
-licensed are the names of a few widows. In Cordwainer Street Ward, there
-was only one Tavern, “kept by a widdowe whose deceased husband was bound
-prentice to a Vintener and so kept his taverne by vertue of his freedome
-of that companye after his termes of apprentizhood expired.”[546]
-
-Footnote 546:
-
- _S.P.D._ ccl., 22, November 6, 1633. Lord Mayor and others to the
- Council.
-
-
- _Conclusion._
-
-The foregoing examination of the relation of women to the different
-crafts and trades has shown them occupying an assured position wherever
-the system of family industry prevailed. While this lasted the
-detachment of married women from business is nowhere assumed, but they
-are expected to assist their husband, and during his absence or after
-his death to take his place as head of the family and manager of the
-business.
-
-The economic position held by women depended upon whether the business
-was carried on at home or elsewhere, and upon the possession of a small
-amount of capital. The wives of men who worked as journeymen on their
-masters’ premises could not share their husbands’ trade, and their
-choice of independent occupations was very limited. The skilled women’s
-trades, such as millinery and mantua-making, were open, and in these,
-though apprenticeship was usual, there is no reason to suppose that
-women who worked in them without having served an apprenticeship, were
-prosecuted; but as has been shown the apprenticeship laws were strictly
-enforced in other directions, and in some cases prevented women from
-using their domestic skill to earn their living.
-
-While women could share their husbands’ trades they suffered little from
-these restrictions, but with the development of capitalistic
-organisation the numbers of women who could find no outlet for their
-productive activity in partnership with their husbands were increasing
-and their opportunities for establishing an independent industry did not
-keep pace; on the contrary, such industry became ever more difficult.
-The immediate result is obscure, but it seems probable that the wife of
-the prosperous capitalist tended to become idle, the wife of the skilled
-journeyman lost her economic independence and became his unpaid domestic
-servant, while the wives of other wage-earners were driven into the
-sweated industries of that period. What were the respective numbers in
-each class cannot be determined, but it is probable that throughout the
-seventeenth century they were still outnumbered by the women who could
-find scope for productive activity in their husbands’ business.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VI
-
- PROFESSIONS
-
-_Introductory_—Tendencies similar to those in Industry.—Army—Church—Law
-closed to women. Teaching—Nursing—Medicine chiefly practised by women as
-domestic arts. Midwifery.
-
-(A). _Nursing._ The sick poor nursed in lay institutions—London
-Hospitals—Dublin—Supplied by low class women—Women searchers for the
-plague—Nurses for small-pox or plague—Hired nurses in private families.
-
-(B) _Medicine._ Women’s skill in Middle ages—Medicine practised
-extensively by women in seventeenth century in their families, among
-their friends and for the poor—Also by the village wise woman for
-pay—Exclusiveness of associations of physicians, surgeons and
-apothecaries.
-
-(C) _Midwifery._ A woman’s profession—Earlier history unknown—Raynold’s
-translation of “the byrthe of mankynd.”—Relative dangers of childbirth
-in seventeenth and twentieth centuries—Importance of midwives—Character
-of their training—Jane Sharp—Nicholas Culpepper—Peter Chamberlain—Mrs.
-Cellier’s scheme for training—Superiority of French training—Licences of
-Midwives—Attitude of the Church to them—Fees—Growing tendency to
-displace midwives by Doctors.
-
-_Conclusion._ Women’s position in the arts of teaching and healing lost
-as these arts became professional.
-
-
- _Introductory._
-
-SIMILAR tendencies to those which affected the industrial position of
-women can be traced in the professions also, showing that, important as
-was the influence of capitalistic organisation in the history of women’s
-evolution, other powerful factors were working in the same direction.
-
-Three professions were closed to women in the seventeenth century, Arms,
-the Church and the Law.
-
-_The Law._—It must be remembered that the mass of the “common people”
-were little affected by “the law” before the seventeenth century.
-“Common law” was the law of the nobles,[547] while farming people and
-artizans alike were chiefly regulated in their dealings with each other
-by customs depending for interpretation and sanction upon a public
-opinion which represented women as well as men. Therefore the changes
-which during the seventeenth century were abrogating customs in favour
-of common law, did in effect eliminate women from what was equivalent to
-a share in the custody and interpretation of law, which henceforward
-remained exclusively in the hands of men. The result of the elimination
-of the feminine influence is plainly shown in a succession of laws,
-which, in order to secure complete liberty to individual men, destroyed
-the collective idea of the family, and deprived married women and
-children of the property rights which customs had hitherto secured to
-them. From this time also the administration of the law becomes
-increasingly perfunctory in enforcing the fulfilment of men’s
-responsibilities to their wives and children.
-
-Footnote 547:
-
- _Holdsworth_, Vol. III., p. 408.
-
-_Church_.—According to modern ideas, religion pertains more to women
-than to men, but this conception is new, dating from the scientific era.
-
-Science has solved so many of the problems which in former days
-threatened the existence of mankind, that the “man in the street”
-instinctively relegates religion to the region in which visible beauty,
-poetry and music are still permitted to linger; to the ornamental sphere
-in short, whither the Victorian gentleman also banished his wife and
-daughters. This attitude forms a singular contrast to the ideas which
-prevailed in the Middle Ages, when men believed that supernatural
-assistance was their sole protection against the “pestilence that
-walketh in darkness” or from “the arrow that flieth by day.” Religion
-was then held to be such an awful power that there were men who even
-questioned whether women could, properly speaking, be considered
-religious at all. Even in the seventeenth century the practice of
-religion and the holding of correct ideas concerning it were deemed to
-be essential for the maintenance of human existence, and no suggestion
-was then made that religious observances could be adequately performed
-by women alone.
-
-Ideas as to the respective appropriateness of religious power to men and
-women have differed widely; some races have reserved the priesthood for
-men, while others have recognised a special power enduing women; in the
-history of others again no uniform tendency is shown, but the two
-influences can be traced acting and reacting upon each other.
-
-This has been the case with the Christian religion, which has combined
-the wide-spread worship of the Mother and Child with a passionate
-splitting of hairs by celibate priests in dogmatic controversies
-concerning intellectual abstractions. The worship of the Mother and
-Child had been extirpated in England before the beginning of the
-seventeenth century; pictures of this subject were denounced because
-they showed the Divine Son under the domination of a woman. One writer
-accuses the Jesuits of representing Christ always “as a sucking child in
-his mothers armes”—“nay, that is nothing they make him an underling to a
-woman,” alleging that “the Jesuits assert (1) no man, but a woman did
-helpe God in the work of our Redemption, (2) that God made Mary partaker
-and fellow with him of his divine Majesty and power, (3) that God hath
-divided his Kingdom with Mary, keeping Justice to himselfe, and yielding
-mercy to her.” He complains that “She is always set forth as a woman and
-a mother, and he as a child and infant, either in her armes, or in her
-hand, that so the common people might have occasion to imagine that
-looke, what power of overruling and commanding the mother hath over her
-little child, the same hath she over her son Jesus ... the mother is
-compared to the son, not as being a child or a man, but as the saviour
-and mediator, and the paps of a woman equalled with the wounds of our
-Lord, and her milke with his blood.... But for her the holy scriptures
-speake no more of her, but as of a creature, a woman ... saved by Faith
-in her Saviour Jesus Christ ... and yet now after 1600 yeares she must
-still be a commanding mother and must show her authority over him ...
-she must be saluted as a lady, a Queen, a goddesse and he as a
-child.”[548]
-
-Footnote 548:
-
- _C.W._ 1641. _The Bespotted Jesuite._
-
-The ridicule with which Peter Heylin treated the worship of the Virgin
-Mary in France seems to have been pointed more at the notion of
-honouring motherhood, rather than at the distinction given to her as a
-woman, for he wrote “if they will worship her as a Nurse with her Child
-in her arms, or at her breast, let them array her in such apparel as
-might beseem a Carpenter’s Wife, such as she might be supposed to have
-worn before the world had taken notice that she was the Mother of her
-Saviour. If they must needs have her in her state of glory as at Amiens;
-or of honour (being now publikely acknowledged to be the blessedness
-among Women) as at Paris: let them disburden her of her Child. To clap
-them thus both together, is a folly equally worthy of scorn &
-laughter.”[549]
-
-Footnote 549:
-
- Heylin (Peter), _The Voyage of France_, p. 29, 1673.
-
-The reform which had swept away the worship of divine motherhood had
-also abolished the enforced celibacy of the priesthood; but the priest’s
-wife was given no position in the Church, and a tendency may be noted
-towards the secularisation of all women’s functions. Convents and
-nunneries were abolished, and no institutions which might specially
-assist women in the performance of their spiritual, educational or
-charitable duties were established in their place. There was, in fact, a
-deep jealousy of any influence which might disturb the authority and
-control which the individual husband exercised over his wife, and
-probably the seventeenth century Englishman was beginning to realise
-that nothing would be so subversive to this authority as the association
-of women together for religious purposes. If a recognised position was
-given to women in the Church, their lives must inevitably receive an
-orientation which would not necessarily be identical with their
-husband’s, thus creating a danger of conflicting loyalties. Naturally,
-therefore, women were excluded from any office, but it would be a
-mistake to suppose that their subordination to their husbands in
-religious matters was rigidly enforced throughout this period. Certainly
-in the first half of the century their freedom of thought in religion
-was usually taken for granted, and possibly amongst the Baptists,
-certainly amongst the Quakers, full spiritual equality was accorded to
-them. Women were universally admitted to the sacraments, and therefore
-recognised as being, in some sort, members of the Church, but this was
-consistent with the view of their position to which Milton’s well known
-lines in “Paradise Lost” give perfect expression, the ideal which, in
-all subsequent social and political changes, was destined to determine
-women’s position in Church and State:—
-
- “Whence true authoritie in men, though both
- Not equal, as their sex not equal seem’d,
- For contemplation hee and valour form’d
- For softness shee, and sweet attractive Grace,
- Hee for God only, shee for God in him:
-
- * * * *
- To whom thus Eve with perfect beauty adornd
- My Author and Disposer, what thou bidst
- Unargu’d I obey; so God ordains,
- God is thy Law, thou mine; to know no more
- Is woman’s happiest knowledge and her praise.”
-
-Nevertheless, though excluded from any position in the hierarchy of
-recognised servants of the Church, it must not be supposed that the
-Church was independent of women’s service. To their hands necessity
-rather than the will of man had entrusted a duty, which when unfulfilled
-makes all the complicated organisation of the Church impotent; namely,
-the bending of the infant mind and soul towards religious ideals and
-emotions. The lives of the reformers of the seventeenth century bear
-witness to the faithfulness with which women accomplished this task. In
-many cases their religious labours were extended beyond the care of
-their children, embracing the whole household for their field of
-service. The life of Letice, Viscountess Falkland, gives an example of
-the sense of responsibility under which many religious women lived. Lady
-Falkland passed about an hour with her maids, early every morning “in
-praying, and catechizing and instructing them; to these secret and
-private prayers, the publick morning and evening prayers of the Church,
-before dinner and supper; and another form (together with reading
-Scriptures and singing Psalms) before bedtime, were daily and constantly
-added ... neither were these holy offices appropriate to her menial
-servants, others came freely to joyn with them, and her Oratory was as
-open to her neighbours as her Hall was ... her Servants were all moved
-to accompany her to the Sacrament, and they who were prevailed with gave
-up their names to her, two or three dayes before, and from thence, she
-applied herself to the instructing of them ... and after the Holy
-Sacrament she called them together again and gave them such exhortations
-as were proper for them.”[550]
-
-Footnote 550:
-
- _Falkland, Lady Letice, Vi-countess, Life and Death of._
-
-The quarrel between Church and State over the teaching profession is an
-old story which does not concern this investigation. It is sufficient to
-note that in England neither Church nor State considered that the work
-of women in training the young entitled them to a recognised position in
-the general social organisation, or required any provision apart from
-the casual arrangements of family life.
-
-_Teaching._—The question of the standard and character of the education
-given to girls is too large a subject to be entered into here; it can
-only be remarked that the number of professional paid women teachers was
-small. The natural aptitude of the average woman for training the young,
-however, enabled mothers to provide their children, both boys and girls,
-with a very useful foundation of elementary education.
-
-The professions of medicine, midwifery and nursing are very closely
-allied to each other; for neither was there any system of instruction on
-a scientific basis available for women, whose practice was thus
-empirical; but as yet science had done little to improve the skill even
-of the male practitioner.
-
-_Nursing._—Nursing was almost wholly a domestic art.
-
-_Medicine._—Though we find many references to women who practised
-medicine and surgery as professions, in the majority of cases their
-skill was used only for the assistance of their family and neighbours.
-
-_Midwifery._—Midwifery was upon a different footing, standing out as the
-most important public function exercised by women, and being regarded as
-their inviolable mystery till near the beginning of the seventeenth
-century. The steady process through which in this profession women were
-then supplanted by men, furnishes an example of the way in which women
-have lost their hold upon all branches of skilled responsible work,
-through being deprived of opportunities for specialised training.
-
-The relative deterioration of woman’s capacity in comparison with the
-standard of men’s efficiency cannot be more clearly shown than in the
-history of midwifery. Even though the actual skill of midwives may not
-have declined during the seventeenth century men were rapidly surpassing
-them in scientific knowledge, for the general standard of women’s
-education was declining, and they were debarred from access to the
-higher branches of learning. As the absence of technical training kept
-women out of the skilled trades, so did the lack of scientific education
-drive them from the more profitable practice of midwifery, which in
-former times tradition and prejudice had reserved as their monopoly.
-
-
- A. _Nursing._
-
-Whatever arrangements had been made by the religious orders in England
-for the care of the sick poor were swept away by the Reformation. The
-provision which existed in the seventeenth century for this purpose
-rested on a lay basis, quite unconnected with the Church. Amongst the
-most famous charitable institutions were the four London Hospitals;
-Christ’s Hospital for children under the age of sixteen, St.
-Bartholomew’s and St. Thomas’s for the sick and impotent poor, and
-Bethlehem for the insane.
-
-There is no evidence that the women of the upper classes took any part
-in the management of these hospitals. The squalor and the ugly and
-disgusting details which are associated with nursing the diseased and
-often degraded poor, was unredeemed by the radiance with which a mystic
-realisation of the Divine Presence had upheld the Catholic Saints, or by
-the passionate desire for the service of humanity which inspired
-Florence Nightingale. Thus it was only the necessity for earning their
-daily bread which induced any women to enter the profession of nursing
-during this period, and as the salaries offered were considerably lower
-than the wages earned by a competent servant in London, it may be
-supposed that the class attracted did not represent the most efficient
-type of women.
-
-The rules appointed for the governance of nurses show that the
-renunciations of a nun’s life were required of them, but social opinion
-in Protestant England set no seal of excellence upon their work, however
-faithfully performed, and the sacrifices demanded from the nurses were
-unrewarded by the crown of victory.
-
-During the reign of Edward VI. there were a matron and twelve sisters at
-St. Bartholomew’s who received in wages £26 6s. 8d. In addition the
-matron received 1s. 6d. per week for board wages and the sisters 1s. 4d.
-per week, and between them £6 per year for livery, while the matron
-received 13s. 4d. for this purpose.[551] The rules for the governance of
-the sisters were as follows:—“Your charge is, in all Things to declare
-and shew yourselves gentle, diligent, and obedient to the Matron of this
-House, who is appointed and authorised to be your chief Governess and
-Ruler. Ye shall also faithfully and charitably serve and help the Poor
-in all their Griefs and Diseases, as well by keeping them sweet and
-clean, as in giving them their Meats and Drinks, after the most honest
-and comfortable Manner. Also ye shall use unto them good and honest
-Talk, such as may comfort and amend them; and utterly to avoid all
-light, wanton, and foolish Words, Gestures, and Manners, using
-yourselves unto them with all Sobriety and Discretion, and above all
-Things, see that ye avoid, abhor, and detest Scolding and Drunkenness as
-most pestilent and filthy Vices. Ye shall not haunt or resort to any
-manner of Person out of this House, except ye be licensed by the Matron;
-neither shall ye suffer any light Person to haunt or use unto you,
-neither any dishonest Person, Man or Woman; and so much as in you shall
-lie, ye shall avoid and shun the Conversation and Company of all Men. Ye
-shall not be out of the Woman’s Ward after the Hour of seven of the
-Clock in the Night, in the Winter Time, nor after Nine of the Clock in
-the Night in the Summer: except ye shall be appointed and commanded by
-the Matron so to be, for some great and special cause that shall concern
-the Poor, (as the present Danger of Death or extreme Sickness), and yet
-so being commanded, ye shall remain no longer with such diseased Person
-than just Cause shall require. Also, if any just Cause of Grief shall
-fortune unto any of you, or that ye shall see Lewdness in any Officer,
-of other Person of this House, which may sound or grow to the Hurt or
-Slander thereof, ye shall declare the same to the Matron, or unto one or
-two of the Govenours of this House, that speedy Remedy therein may be
-had; and to no other Person neither shall ye talk or meddle therein any
-farther. This is your Charge, and with any other Thing you are not
-charged.”[552]
-
-Footnote 551:
-
- Stow, _London_, I., pp. 185-186.
-
-Footnote 552:
-
- Stow, _London_, app., p. 58.
-
-The Matron was instructed to “receive of the Hospitaler of this House
-all such sick and diseased Persons as he ... shall present unto you,”
-and to “have also Charge, Governance & Order of all the Sisters of this
-House ... that every of them ... do their Duty unto the Poor, as well in
-making of their Beds, and keeping their Wards, as also in washing and
-purging their unclean Cloaths, and other Things. And that the same
-Sisters every night after the Hour of seven of the Clock in the Winter,
-and nine of the Clock in the Summer, come not out of the Woman’s Ward,
-except some great and special Cause (as the present Danger of Death, or
-needful Succour of some poor Person). And yet at such a special time it
-shall not be lawful for every Sister to go forth to any Person or
-Persons (no tho’ it be in her Ward) but only for such as you shall think
-virtuous, godly, and discreet. And the same Sister to remain no longer
-with the same sick Person then needful Cause shall require. Also at such
-times as the Sisters shall not be occupied about the Poor, ye shall set
-them to spinning or doing some other Manner of Work, that may avoid
-Idleness, and be profitable to the Poor of this House. Also ye shall
-receive the Flax ... the same being spun by the Sisters, ye shall commit
-to the said Governors.... You shall also ... have special Regard to the
-good ordering & keeping of all the Sheets, Coverlets, Blankets, Beds,
-and other Implements committed to your Charge, ... Also ye shall suffer
-no poor Person of this House to sit and drink within your House at no
-Time, neither shall ye so send them drink into their Wards, that thereby
-Drunkenness might be used and continued among them.”[553]
-
-Footnote 553:
-
- Stow, _London_, App., pp. 57-58.
-
-In Christ’s Hospital there were two Matrons with salaries of £2 13s. 4d.
-per annum and forty-two women keepers with salaries of 40s. per annum.
-Board wages were allowed at the rate of 1s. 4d. per week for the
-“keepers” and 1s. 6d. for the Matrons. There was one keeper for fifteen
-persons.[554] The Matron was advised “Your office is an office of great
-charge and credite. For to yow is committed the Governance and oversight
-of all the women and children within this Hospital. And also to yow is
-given Authoritie to commaunde, reprove, and rebuke them or any of
-them.... Your charge is also to searche and enquire whether the women do
-their Dutie, in washing of the children’s sheets and shirts, and in
-kepeing clean and sweet those that are committed to their Charge; and
-also in the Beddes, Sheets, Coverlets, and Apparails (with kepeing clean
-Wards and Chambers) mending of such as shall be broken from Time to
-Time. And specially yow shall give diligent Hede, that the said Washers
-and Nurses of this Howse be alwaies well occupied and not idle; ... you
-shal also once every Quarter of the Year examine the Inventorie.”[555]
-
-Footnote 554:
-
- _Ibid._ I., pp. 175-6.
-
-Footnote 555:
-
- Stow, _London_, app., p. 42.
-
-The nurses were instructed that they must “carefully and diligently
-oversee, kepe, and governe all those tender Babes & yonglings that shal
-be committed to your Charge, and the same holesomely, cleanely and
-swetely nourishe and bring up ... kepe your Wardes and every Part
-thereof swete and cleane ... avoid all Idleness when your Charge and
-Care of keping the Children is past, occupie yourselves in Spinning,
-Sewing, mending of Sheets and Shirts, or some other vertuous Exercise,
-such as you shal be appointed unto. Ye shal not resort or suffer any Man
-to resort to you, before ye have declared the same to the almoners or
-Matron of this Howse and obtained their Lycense and Favour, so to do ...
-see that all your children, before they be brought to Bed, be washed and
-cleane, and immediately after, every one of yow quietly shal go to your
-Bed, and not to sit up any longer; and once every night arise, and see
-that the Children be covered, for taking of Colde.”[556]
-
-Footnote 556:
-
- Stow, _London_, app., p. 43.
-
-Some idea of the class of women who actually undertook the important
-duties of Matron for the London Hospitals may be gathered from a
-petition presented by Joane Darvole, Matron of St. Thomas’s Hospital,
-Southwark, to Laud. She alleged “that she was dragged out of the Chapel
-of the Hospital at service and dragged along the streets to prison for
-debt, to the hazard of her life,” she being a “very weak sickly and aged
-woman,” clothes torn from her back and cast into a swoon. She petitions
-against the profanation of God’s house and the scandal to the
-congregation.[557]
-
-Footnote 557:
-
- _S.P.D._, cccclv., 87., May 30th, 1640.
-
-Sick and wounded soldiers were tended at the Savoy, where there were
-thirteen Sisters, whose joint salaries amounted to £52 16s. 8d. per
-annum.[558] Among the orders for the patients, nurses and widows in the
-Savoy and other hospitals in and about London occur the following
-regulations:—4ᵗʰˡʸ “That every soldier or nurse ... that shall profanely
-sweare” to pay 12d. for the first offence, 12d. for the second, and be
-expelled for the third. 8ᵗʰˡʸ “That if any souldier shall marye any of
-the nurses of the said houses whilst hee is there for care or (recov)ery
-they both shall be turned forth of the House. 11ᵗʰˡʸ No soldier under
-cure to have their (wiv)es lodge with them there except by the
-approbation of the Phisicion. 12ᵗʰˡʸ No nurse to be dismissed without
-the approval of 2 of the Treasurers for the relief of maimed soldiers at
-least. Nurses to be chosen from among the widows of soldiers if there
-are among them those that be fit, and those to have 5s. per weeke as
-others usually have had for the service. 14ᵗʰˡʸ soldiers, wounded and
-sick, outside the hospitals not to have more than 4s. per week. Those in
-St. Thomas’s and Bartholomew’s hospital 2s. a week, those in their
-parents’, masters’ or friends’ houses, according to their necessities,
-but not more than 4s. per week. 15ᵗʰˡʸ Soldiers’ widows to receive
-according to their necessities, but not more than 4s. a week. 19ᵗʰˡʸ If
-any of the nurses ... shalbee negligent in their duties or in giving due
-attendance to the ... sicke souldiers by daye or night or shall by
-scoulding, brawlinge or chidinge make any disturbance in the said
-hospitall, she shall forfeite 12d. for 1st offence, week’s pay for
-second, be dismissed for the third. 20ᵗʰˡʸ If any widow after marriage
-shall come and receive weekly pensions as a soldier’s widow contrary to
-the ordinance of parlᵗ he which hath married her to repay it, & if he is
-unable she shall be complained of to the nearest J.P. and be punished as
-a de(ceiver).”[559]
-
-Footnote 558:
-
- Stow, _London_ I., p. 211.
-
-Footnote 559:
-
- _S.P.D._, dxxxix, 231., November 15, 1644.
-
-There was one nurse for every ten patients in the Dublin hospitals, and
-the salary was £10 per annum, out of which she had to find her
-board.[560]
-
-Footnote 560:
-
- _S.P.D._, Interreg: I, 62, p. 633., 17 Aug., 1649.
-
-The opportunity which the hospitals afforded for training in the art of
-nursing was entirely wasted. The idea that the personal tending of the
-sick and forlorn poor would be a religious service of special value in
-the sight of God had vanished, and their care, no longer transformed by
-the devotion of religious enthusiasm, appeared a sordid duty, only fit
-for the lowest class in the community. Well-to-do men relieved their
-consciences by bequeathing money for the endowment of hospitals, but the
-sense of social responsibility was not fostered in girls, and the
-expression of charitable instincts was almost confined in the case of
-women to their personal relations.
-
-Outside the hospitals employment was given to a considerable number of
-women in the tending of persons stricken with small-pox or the plague,
-and in searching corpses for signs of the plague. London constables and
-churchwardens were ordered in 1570 “to provide to have in readiness
-Women to be Provyders & Deliverers of necessaries to infected Howses,
-and to attend the infected Persons, and they to bear reed Wandes, so
-that the sick maie be kept from the whole, as nere as maie be, needful
-attendance weyed.”[561]
-
-Footnote 561:
-
- Stow, _London_, V., p. 433.
-
-In the town records of Reading it is noted “at this daye Marye Jerome
-Wydowe was sworn to be a viewer and searcher of all the bodyes that
-shall dye within this boroughe, and truly to report and certifye to her
-knowledge of what disease they dyed, etc.; and Anne Lovejoy widowe,
-jurata, 4ˢ a weeke a peice, allowing iiijs. a moneth after.”[562] “Mary
-Holte was sworne to be a searcher of the dead bodyes hencefovrth dyeinge
-within the boroughe (being thereunto required) having iiijs. a weeke for
-her wages, and iiid. a corps carryeing to buryall, and iiijs. a weeke a
-moneth after the ceassinge of the plague.”[563]
-
-Footnote 562:
-
- Guilding, _Reading Records_, Vol. II., p. 241, 1625.
-
-Footnote 563:
-
- _Ibid._ Vol. II., p. 244, 1625.
-
-In 1637 it was “agreed ... with old Frewyn and his wief, that she shall
-presentlye goe into the house of Henry Merrifeild and be aidinge &
-helpinge to the said Merrifeild and his wief, during the time of their
-visitacion [plague].... She shall have dyett with them, and six weekes
-after their visitacion ended. And old Frewin to have 2s. a week duringe
-all that tyme paid him, and 2s. in hand. And she shall have 2ˢ a weeke
-kept for her & paid her in th’end of the sixe weekes after.”[564] Later
-“it was thought fitt the Woman keeper and Merifielde’s wenche in the
-Pest-house, it beinge above vj weekes past since any one dyed there,
-should be at libertie and goe hence to her husbande’s house, she havinge
-done her best endevour to ayre and cleanse all the beddes & beddinge &
-other things in both the houses ... for her mayntenance vj weekes after
-the ceassinge of the sicknes, she keepinge the wenche with her, they
-shalbe paid 3s. a weeke for and towardes their mayntenance duringe the
-vj weekes.”[565] In 1639 the Council “Agree to geve the Widowe Lovejoye
-in full satisfaccion for all her paynes taken in and about the visited
-people in this Towne in this last visitacion xls. in money, and cloth to
-make her a kirtle and a wascote, and their favour towards her two
-sonnes-in-lawe (beinge forreynours) about their fredome.”[566] On a
-petition in 1641 from Widow Lovejoy “for better allowance & satisfaction
-for her paines aboute the visited people; ... it was agreed that she
-shall have xxxs. soe soone as the taxe for the visited people is made
-uppe.”[567]
-
-Footnote 564:
-
- _Ibid._ Vol. III., p. 371.
-
-Footnote 565:
-
- _Ibid._ Vol. III., p. 384, 1637.
-
-Footnote 566:
-
- Guilding, _Reading Records_, Vol. III., p. 459.
-
-Footnote 567:
-
- _Ibid._ Vol. IV., p. 8.
-
-In rural districts where hospitals were seldom within reach, entries are
-not infrequently found in the parish account books of payments made to
-women for nursing the poor. “Item. To Mother Middleton for twoe nights
-watchinge with Widow Coxe’s child being sick.”[568] “To Goody Halliday,
-for nursing him & his family 5 weeks £1 5; to Goody Nye, for assisting
-in nursing, 2s. 6d.[569] ... to Goody Peckham for nursing a beggar, 5s.
-For nursing Wickham’s boy with the small pocks 12s.”[570] A
-Hertfordshire parish paid a woman 15s. for her attendance during three
-weeks on a woman and her illegitimate child.[571] A Morton man was
-ordered to pay out of his next half-year’s rent for the grounds he
-farmed of Isabelle Squire “20s. to Margt. Squire, who attended and
-looked to her half a year during the time of her distraction.”[572]
-
-Footnote 568:
-
- _Sussex Arch. Coll._, Vol. XXIII., p. 90. _Hastings Documents_, 1601.
-
-Footnote 569:
-
- _Sussex Arch. Coll._, Vol. XX., p. 117. _Acc. Book of Cowden,_ 1704.
-
-Footnote 570:
-
- _Ibid._ p. 118.
-
-Footnote 571:
-
- _Hertford County Records_, Vol. I., p. 435, 1698.
-
-Footnote 572:
-
- Atkinson, J. C., _Yorks. N. R. Q.S. Records_, Vol. VII., p. 91. 1688.
-
-Sometimes nurses were provided for the poor by religious and charitable
-ladies, who, like Letice, Viscountess Falkland, “hired nurses to serve
-them.”[573] Sick nurses were also engaged by well-to-do people to attend
-upon themselves or their servants. Thus the Rev. Giles Moore enters in
-his journal “My mayde being sicke I payd for opening her veine 4d. to
-the Widdow Rugglesford, for looking to her, I gave 1s. and to old Bess
-for tending her 3 days and 2 nights I gave 1ˢ; in all 2ˢ 4ᵈ.”[574] A
-little later, when the writer himself was “in an ague. Paid Goodwyfe
-Ward for being necessary to me 1s.”[575] Though his daughter was with
-him, a nurse watched in the chamber when Colonel Hutchinson died in the
-prison at Dover.[576]
-
-Footnote 573:
-
- _Falkland, Lady Letice, Vi-countess, Life and Death of._
-
-Footnote 574:
-
- _Sussex Arch. Coll._, Vol. I., p. 72. _Rev. Giles Moore’s Journal._
-
-Footnote 575:
-
- _Ibid._ Vol. I., p. 100. 1667.
-
-Footnote 576:
-
- _Memoirs of Col. Hutchinson_, p. 377.
-
-A few extracts from account books will supply further details as to the
-usual scale of remuneration for nurses; no doubt in each case the money
-given was in addition to meat and drink. Sarah Fell enters “by mᵒ given
-Ann Daniell for her paines about Rachell Yeamans when she died
-05.00.”[577] Timothy Burrell “pd. Gosmark for tending Mary 3 weeks
-6s.”[578] Lady Grisell Baillie engaged a special nurse for her daughter
-Rachy at a fee of 5s.[579] At Herstmonceux Castle they “pd Hawkin’s wife
-for tending the sick maiden 10 days 3s. Pd. Widdow Weeks for tending
-sick seruants a fortnight 4s.”[580] Sir John Foulis in Scotland paid “to
-Ketherin in pᵗ paymᵗ & till account for her attendance on me the time of
-my sickness 12. 0. 0” [scots].[581] “To Katherine tueddie in compleat
-paymᵗ for her attendance on me wⁿ I was sick 20. 0. 0.” [scots].[582]
-“To my good douchter jennie to give tibbie tomsone for her attendance on
-my wife the time of her sickness 5. 16. 0. [scots].”[583]
-
-Footnote 577:
-
- Fell (Sarah), _Household Accounts_, p. 285. June 20, 1676.
-
-Footnote 578:
-
- _Sussex Arch. Coll._, Vol. III., p. 123. _Journal of Timothy Burrell._
- 1688.
-
-Footnote 579:
-
- _Baillie, Lady Grisell, Household Book._ Intro. lxvii.
-
-Footnote 580:
-
- _Sussex Arch. Coll._, Vol. XLVIII., p. 121. 1643-1649.
-
-Footnote 581:
-
- Foulis, Sir John, _Account Book_, p. 346. May 23, 1704.
-
-Footnote 582:
-
- _Ibid._ p. 396. August 22, 1705.
-
-Footnote 583:
-
- _Ibid._ p. 314. January 28, 1703.
-
-All the above instances refer to professional nursing; that is to say to
-the tending of the sick for wages, but nursing was more often of an
-unprofessional character. Sickness was rife in all classes, and for the
-most part the sick were tended by the women of their household or
-family. The claim for such assistance was felt beyond the limits of
-kinship, and in the village community each woman would render it to her
-neighbour without thought of reward. The solidarity of the community was
-a vital tradition to the village matron of the early seventeenth
-century, and it was only in cases of exceptional isolation or
-difficulty, or where the sick person was a stranger or an outcast that
-the services of a paid nurse were called in. Probably the standard of
-efficiency was higher in domestic than in professional nursing, because
-professional nurses received no systematic training. Their rate of
-remuneration was low, the essential painfulness of their calling was not
-concealed by the glamour of a religious vocation, still less was it
-rewarded by any social distinction. Therefore the women who took up
-nursing for their livelihood did so from necessity, and were drawn from
-the lower classes.
-
-Illness was so frequent in the seventeenth century that few girls can
-have reached maturity without the opportunity of practising the art of
-nursing at home; but amongst the “common people,” that is to say all the
-class of independent farmers and tradesmen, the housewife can hardly
-have found time to perfect her skill in nursing to a fine art. Probably
-the highest level was reached in the households of the gentry, where
-idleness was not yet the accepted hall-mark of a lady, and the mistress
-felt herself to be responsible for the training of her children and
-servants in every branch of the domestic arts, amongst which were
-reckoned both medicine and nursing.
-
-
- B. _Surgery and Medicine._
-
-The position held by mediæval women in the arts of healing is shown in
-such books as Mallory’s “Morte d’Arthur.” When wounds proved intractable
-to the treatment of the rough and ready surgeons who attended in the
-vicinity of tourneys, knights sought help from some high-born lady
-renowned for her skill in medicine. It is true that popular belief
-assigned her success to witchcraft rather than to the knowledge and
-understanding acquired by diligent study and experience, but a tendency
-to faith in the occult was universal, and the reputation of the ladies
-probably bore some relation to their success in the cures attempted,
-for, according to the author of “The Golden Bough,” science is the
-lineal descendant of witchcraft. The position of pre-eminence as
-consultants was no longer retained by women in the seventeenth century.
-Schools and Universities had been founded, where men could study
-medicine and anatomy, and thus secure for themselves a higher standard
-of knowledge and efficiency; but, though women were excluded from these
-privileges they were not yet completely ousted from the medical
-profession, and as a domestic art medicine was still extensively
-practised by them.
-
-Every housewife was expected to understand the treatment of the minor
-ailments at least of her household, and to prepare her own drugs.
-Commonplace books of this period contain recipes for making mulberry
-syrup, preserving fruit and preparing meats, mingled with, for example,
-prescriptions for plague water, which is “very good against the plague,
-the small-pox, the measles, surfeitts ... and is of a sovereign nature
-to be given in any sickness.” “An oyle good for any ach—and ointments
-for sore eyes or breasts, or stone in the kidney or bladder.” And in
-addition, “my brother Jones his way of making inks.”[584] “The Ladies
-Dispensatory” contains “the Natures, Vertues and Qualities of all Herbs,
-and Simples usefull in Physick. Reduced into a Methodical Order,” the
-diseases to be treated including those of men, as well as women and
-children.[585]
-
-Footnote 584:
-
- _Add. MSS._ 36308.
-
-Footnote 585:
-
- Sowerby (Leonard). _The Ladies’ Dispensatory._ 1651.
-
-As was the case in other domestic arts, girls depended for their
-training in medicine chiefly on the tradition they received from their
-mothers, but this was reinforced from other sources as occasion offered.
-“The Ladies Dispensatory” was not the only handbook published for their
-use; sometimes, though schools were closed to women, an opportunity
-occurred for private coaching. Thus Sarah Fell entered in her account
-book, “July ʸᵉ 5º 1674 by mᵒ to Bro: Loweʳ yᵗ hee gave Thomas Lawson foʳ
-comeinge over hitheʳ to Instruct him & sistʳˢ, in the knowledge of
-herbs. 10.00,”[586] and when Mrs. Hutchinson’s husband was Governor of
-the Tower she allowed Sir Walter Raleigh and Mr. Ruthin during their
-imprisonment to make experiments in chemistry “at her cost, partly to
-comfort and divert the poor prisoners, and partly to gain the knowledge
-of their experiments, and the medicines to help such poor people as were
-not able to seek physicians. By these means she acquired a great deal of
-skill, which was very profitable to many all her life.”[587]
-
-Footnote 586:
-
- Fell, (Sarah). _Household Accounts_, p. 95. July 5, 1674.
-
-Footnote 587:
-
- _Memoirs of Col. Hutchinson_, p. 12.
-
-Neither did ladies confine their services to their own household, but
-extended their benefits to all their suffering neighbours. The care of
-the sick poor was considered to be one of the duties of a “Person of
-Quality,” whose housekeepers were expected “to have a competent
-knowledge in Physick and Chyrurgery, that they may be able to help their
-maimed, sick and indigent Neighbours; for Commonly, all good and
-charitable Ladies make this a part of their Housekeepers business.”[588]
-The “Good Woman” is described as one who “distributes among the
-Indigent, Money and Books, and Cloaths, and Physick, as their severall
-Circumstances may require,” to relieve “her poorer Neighbours in sudden
-Distress, when a Doctor is not at Hand, or when they have no Money to
-buy what may be necessary for them; and the charitableness of her
-Physick is often attended by some cure or other that is remarkable. God
-gives a _peculiar Blessing_ to the Practice of those Women who have no
-other design in this Matter, but the doing Good: that neither prescribe
-where they may have the Advice of the Learned, nor at any time give or
-recommend any thing to try Experiments, but what they are assured from
-former Tryals is safe and innocent; and if it do not help cannot
-hurt.”[589]
-
-Footnote 588:
-
- _Compleat Servant-maid_, p. 40.
-
-Footnote 589:
-
- Rogers, Timothy. _Character of a Good Woman_, p. 42-43.
-
-The provision made by Lady Falkland of “antidotes against infection and
-of Cordials, and other several sorts of Physick for such of her
-Neighbours as should need them, amounted yearly to very considerable
-summes ... her skil indeed was more than ordinary, and her wariness
-too.... Bookes of spiritual exhortations, she carried in her hand to
-these sick persons.”[590] Mrs. Elizabeth Bedell “was very famous and
-expert in Chirurgery, which she continually practised upon multitudes
-that flock’d to her, and still _gratis_, without respect of persons,
-poor or rich. It hapned occasionally that some would return like the
-heald Samaritan, with some token of thankfulness; though this was
-seldom. But God did not fail to reward them with (that which in
-Scripture is most properly call’d his reward) children, and the fruit of
-the womb. 3 sons and 4 daughters.”[591]
-
-Footnote 590:
-
- _Falkland, Lady Lettice, Vi-countess, The Life and Death of._
-
-Footnote 591:
-
- _Bedell, (Wm.), Life and Death of_, p. 2.
-
-Expressions of gratitude to women for these medical services occur in
-letters and diaries of the time. The Rev. R. Josselin enters January
-27th, 1672, “My L. Honeywood sent her coach for me: yᵗ I stayd to March
-10, in wᶜʰ time my Lady was my nurse & Phisitian & I hope for much good:
-... they considered yᵉ scurvy. I tooke purge & other things for
-it;”[592] Marmaduke Rawdon met with a carriage accident, in which he
-strained his “arme, but comminge to Hodsden his good cossen Mrs.
-Williams, with hir arte and care, quickly cured itt, and in ten dayes
-was well againe.”[593]
-
-Footnote 592:
-
- Jonson, (Ben.), _The Alchemist_, Act IV. Sc. I.
-
-Footnote 593:
-
- Josselin, (R.), _Diary_, pp. 163-4.
-
-Nor was the practice of medicine confined to Gentlewomen; many a humble
-woman in the country, the wife of farmer or husbandman, used her skill
-for the benefit of her neighbours. In their case, though many were
-prompted purely by motives of kindness and goodwill, others received
-payment for their services. How much the dependence of the common people
-on the skill of these “wise women” was taken for granted is suggested by
-some lines in “The Alchemist,” where Mammon assures Dol Common
-
- “This nook, here, of the Friers is no Climate
- For her to live obscurely in, to learne
- Physick, and Surgery, for the Constable’s wife
- Of some odde Hundred in Essex.”[594]
-
-Footnote 594:
-
- _Rawdon, (Marmaduke), Life of_, p. 85.
-
-Though their work was entirely unscientific, experience and common
-sense, or perhaps mere luck, often gave to their treatment an appearance
-of success which was denied to their more learned rivals. Thus Adam
-Martindale describing his illness says that it was “a vehement
-fermentation in my body ... ugly dry scurfe, eating deep and spreading
-broad. Some skilfull men, or so esteemed, being consulted and differing
-much in their opinions, we were left to these three bad choices ... in
-this greate straite God sent us in much mercie a poore woman, who by a
-salve made of nothing but Celandine and a little of the Mosse of an ashe
-root, shred and boyled in May-butter, tooke it cleare away in a short
-time, and though after a space there was some new breakings out, yet
-these being annointed with the same salve ... were absolutely cleared
-away.”[595]
-
-Footnote 595:
-
- _Martindale (Adam), Life of_, p. 21. 1632.
-
-The general standard of efficiency among the men who professed medicine
-and surgery was very low, the chief work of the ordinary country
-practitioner being the letting of blood, and the wise woman of the
-village may easily have been his superior in other forms of treatment.
-Sir Ralph Verney, writing to his wife advises her to “give the child no
-phisick but such as midwives and old women, with the doctors
-approbation, doe prescribe; for assure yourselfe they by experience know
-better than any phisition how to treate such infants.”[596] Of Hobbes it
-was said that he took little physick and preferred “an experienced old
-woman” to the “most learned and inexperienced physician.”[597]
-
-Footnote 596:
-
- _Verney Family_, Vol. 2, p. 270. 1647.
-
-Footnote 597:
-
- _Dictionary of National Biography._
-
-Dr. Turbeville, a noted oculist in the West Country, was sent for to
-cure the Princess of Denmark, who had a dangerous inflammation of the
-eyes. On his return he is reported to have said that “he expected to
-learn something of these Court doctors, but, to his amazement he found
-them only spies upon his practice, and wholly ignorant as to the lady’s
-case; nay, farther, he knew several midwives and old women, whose advice
-he would rather follow than theirs.”[598] He died at Sarum in 1696, and
-his sister, Mrs. Mary Turbeville, practised afterwards in London “with
-good reputation and success. She has all her brother’s receipts, and
-having seen his practice, during many years, knows how to use them. For
-my part, I have so good an opinion of her skill that should I again be
-afflicted with sore eyes, which God forbid! I would rely upon her advice
-rather than upon any pretenders or professors in London or
-elsewhere.”[599]
-
-Footnote 598:
-
- Hoare, Sir R. C., _History of Modern Wilts_, Vol. VI., p. 465.
-
-Footnote 599:
-
- Hoare, Sir R. C., _History of Modern Wilts_, Vol. VI., p. 467.
-
-Events, however, were taking place which would soon curtail the practice
-of women whose training was confined to personal experience, tradition
-and casual study. The established associations of physicians, surgeons
-and apothecaries, although of recent growth, demanded and obtained, like
-other companies, exclusive privileges. Their policy fell in with the
-Government’s desire to control the practice of medicine, in order to
-check witchcraft. Statute 3, Henry VIII., enacted that “none should
-exercise the Faculty of Physick or Surgery within the City of _London_
-or within Seven Miles of the same, unless first he were examined,
-approved and admitted by the Bishop of _London_, or the Dean of _St.
-Paul’s_, calling to him or them Four Doctors of Physick, and for Surgery
-other expert Persons in that Faculty, upon pain of Forfeiture of £5 for
-every Month they should occupy Physick or Surgery, not thus admitted”
-because “that common Artificers, as Smiths, Weavers, and Women, boldly
-and accustomably took upon them great Cures, and Things of great
-Difficulty, in the which they partly used Sorceries and Witchcraft, and
-partly applied such Medicines unto the Diseased, as were very noyous,
-and nothing meet therefore.”[600]
-
-Footnote 600:
-
- Stow, _London_ I., p. 132.
-
-The restrictions were extended to the provinces. A Charter given to the
-Company of Barber-Surgeons at Salisbury in 1614 declared that “No
-surgeon or barber is to practise any surgery or barbery, unless first
-made a free citizen, and then a free brother of the company. Whereas,
-also, there are divers women and others within this city, altogether
-unskilled in the art of chirurgery, who do oftentimes take cures on
-them, to the great danger of the patient, it is therefore ordered, that
-no such woman, or any other, shall take or meddle with any cure of
-chirurgery, wherefore they, or any of them shall have or take any money,
-benefit or other reward for the same, upon pain that every delinquent
-shall for every cure to be taken in hand, or meddled with, contrary to
-this order, unless she or they shall be first allowed by this Company,
-forfeit and lose to the use of this Company the sum of ten
-shillings.”[601]
-
-Footnote 601:
-
- Hoare, Sir R. C., _History of Modern Wilts_, Vol. VI., p. 341.
-
-The Apothecaries were separated from the Grocers in 1617, the charter of
-their company providing that “No person or persons whatsoever may have,
-hold, or keep an Apothecaries Shop or Warehouse, or that may exercise or
-use the Art or Mystery of Apothecaries, or make, mingle, work, compound,
-prepare, give, apply, or administer, any Medicines, or that may sell,
-set on sale, utter, set forth, or lend any Compound or Composition to
-any person or persons whatsoever within the City of London, and the
-Liberties thereof, or within Seven Miles of the said city, unless such
-person or persons as have been brought up, instructed, and taught by the
-space of Seven Years at the least, as Apprentice or Apprentices, with
-some Apothecary or Apothecaries exercising the same Art, and being a
-Freeman of the said Mystery.” Any persons wishing to become an
-Apothecary must be examined and approved after his apprenticeship.[602]
-
-Footnote 602:
-
- Barrett, _History of Apothecaries_, Intro., p. xxxii.
-
-It will be observed that there is little in their charters to
-distinguish the medical from other city Companies, and while the
-examination required by the Faculties of Medicine and Surgery in the
-City of London excluded women altogether, the Apothecaries still
-admitted them by marriage or apprenticeship. “Mʳⁱˢ Lammeere Godfrey
-Villebranke her son both Dutch Pothecarys” are included in a certificate
-made by the Justices of the Peace to the Privy Council, of the
-foreigners residing in the Liberty of Westminster.[603] A journeyman who
-applied for the freedom of the company, stated that he was serving the
-widow of an apothecary. His application was refused time after time
-through difficulties owing to a clause in the Charter. Counsel’s opinion
-was taken, and finally he was admitted provided he kept a journeyman and
-entered into a bond of £100 to perform the same, that he gave £10 and a
-spoon to the Company, took the oaths and paid Counsel’s fees.[604] He
-subsequently married the widow. Similar rules obtained in the provinces,
-as is shown by the admittance of Thomas Serne in 1698-9 to the freedom
-of the City of Dorchester on payment of 40s. because he had “married a
-wife who had lived as apprentice for 20 years to an apothecary.”[605]
-
-Footnote 603:
-
- _S.P.D._, ccc., 75., October 1635.
-
-Footnote 604:
-
- Barrett, _History of Apothecaries_, pp. 28-9.
-
-Footnote 605:
-
- Mayo, C. H., _Municipal Records of Dorchester_, p. 428.
-
-The jurisdiction of companies was local, and where no company existed
-boys were apprenticed to surgery for the sake of training, though such
-an apprenticeship conferred no monopoly privilege. Surgery was sometimes
-combined with another trade. John Croker describes in his memoir how he
-was bound apprentice in 1686 to one John Shilson “by trade a
-serge-maker, but who also professed surgery; with whom I went to be
-instructed in the art of surgery.”[606] The operation of these various
-Statutes and Charters being local and their enforcement depending upon
-the energy of the parties interested, it is difficult to determine what
-was their actual and immediate effect on the medical practice of women.
-Statute 3, Henry VIII., must have been enforced with some severity, for
-a later one declares “Sithence the making of which said Act the companie
-& felowship of surgeons of London, minding oonly their own lucres, and
-nothing the profit or ease of the diseased or patient, have sued,
-troubled and vexed divers honest persons as well men as women, whom God
-hath endued with the knowledge of the nature, kind, and operation of
-certain herbes, roots and waters, and the using & ministering of them to
-such as been pained with customable diseases, as women’s breasts being
-sore, a pin and the web in the eye, &c., &c., and yet the said persons
-have not taken any thing for their pains or cunning.”[607]
-
-Footnote 606:
-
- Croker, (John), _Brief Memoirs_, p. 5.
-
-Footnote 607:
-
- _Statutes at Large._ 34 Henry VIII. C. 8.
-
-Not only the Surgeons but the Apothecaries also, enforced observance of
-the privileges which the King had granted to them, and in consequence a
-Petition of many thousands of citizens and inhabitants in and about
-London was presented on behalf of Mr. William Trigg, Practitioner of
-Physick, saying that he “did abundance of good to all sorts of people in
-and about this City: when most of the Colledge Doctors deserted us,
-since which time your Petitioners have for above twenty yeares, in their
-severall times of Sicknesses, and infirmities taken Physick from him ...
-in which time, we doe verily believe in our consciences, that he hath
-done good to above thirty thousand Persons; and that he maketh all his
-Compositions himselfe, not taking anything for his Physick from poor
-people; but rather releiving their necessities, nor any money from any
-of us for his advice; and but moderately for his Physick: his custome
-being to take from the middle sort of Patients 12d., 18d., 2s., 2s. 6d.
-as they please to give, very seldom five shillings unlesse from such as
-take much Physick with them together into the Countrey ... there is a
-good and wholesome law made in the 34th year of King Henry 8 C. 8.
-Permitting every man that hath knowledge and experience in the nature of
-Herbs, Roots and waters, to improve his Talent for the common good and
-health of the people,” and concluding that unless Dr. Trigg is allowed
-to continue his practice “many poore people must of necessity perish to
-death ... for they are not able to pay great fees to Doctors and
-Apothecaries bills which cost more then his advice and Physick; nor can
-we have accesse unto them when we desire, which we familiarly have to
-Dr. _Trigg_ to our great ease and comfort.”[608]
-
-Footnote 608:
-
- _Humble Petition of many thousands of Citizens, and Inhabitants in and
- about London._
-
-Prudence Ludford, wife of William Ludford of Little Barkhampton, was
-presented in 1683 “for practising the profession of a chyrurgeon
-contrary to law,”[609] but many women at this time continued their
-practice as doctors undisturbed; for example, Mrs. Lucy Hutchinson
-casually mentions that one of her maids went to Colson, to have a sore
-eye cured by a woman of the town.[610] While Mrs. D’ewes was travelling
-from Axminster to London by coach, her baby boy cried so violently all
-the way, on account of the roughness of the road that he ruptured
-himself, and was left behind at Dorchester under the care of Mrs.
-Margaret Waltham, “a female practitioner.”[611]
-
-Footnote 609:
-
- _Hertford Co. Records_, Vol. I., p. 328.
-
-Footnote 610:
-
- _Memoirs of Col. Hutchinson_, p. 427.
-
-Footnote 611:
-
- Yonge, Walter, _Diary_, Intro., xxii.
-
-The account books of Boroughs and Parishes show that the poor received
-medical treatment from men and women indiscriminately. A whole series of
-such payments occur in the minute book of the Dorchester Corporation.
-“It is ordered that the Vˡⁱ to be paid to Peter Salanova for cutting of
-Giles Garrett’s leg shall be paid out of the Xˡⁱ yearly paiable out of
-the Hospitall for pious vses ... to have the one halfe having cutt of
-his leg already, and the other halfe when he is thoroughly cured.[612]
-... Unto the Widdow Foote xs. for the curing of the Widow Huchins’ lame
-leg at present; and xs. more when the cure is finished[613].... Mr.
-Losse should be payed by the Steward of the Hospital the somme of viij
-li for his paynes and fee as Phisitian in taking care of the poore of
-the Towne for the last yeare ... as it hath bin formerly accustomed....
-Vnto Mr. Mullens the somme of thirty shillings for curing Hugh Rogers of
-a dangerous fistula.”[614] Three pounds more (three having already been
-paid) was ordered to be given to “Cassander Haggard for finishing the
-great cure on John Drayton otherwise Keuse.”[615] In another case the
-Council tendered to Mr. Mullens, “the chirurgeon, the some of xxxˢ for
-curing of Thomas Hobbs, but he answered hee would consider of it next
-weeke [He declined].”[616]
-
-Footnote 612:
-
- _Ibid._ Vol. XVIII., p. 196. _Accounts of Parish of Mayfield._
-
-Footnote 613:
-
- _Cratfield Parish Papers_, p. 179., 1640.
-
-Footnote 614:
-
- Mayo, C. H., _Municipal Records of Dorchester_, p. 516, 1640.
-
-Footnote 615:
-
- _Ibid._ p. 518, 1651.
-
-Footnote 616:
-
- _Ibid._ p. 518, 1649-50.
-
-At Cowden the overseers paid to Dr. Willett for “reducing the arm of
-Elizᵗʰ Skinner, and for ointment, cerecloths and journeys, £2;” three
-years later a further sum of 10s. was given “to Goodwife Wells for
-curing Eliz Skinner’s hand.”[617] Mary Olyve was paid 6s. 8d. “for
-curing a boye that was lame” at Mayfield,[618] and 15s. was given to
-“Widow Thurston for healing of Stannard’s son,” by the churchwardens at
-Cratfield.[619] In Somerset £5 was paid to “Johane Shorley towards the
-cure of Thomas Dudderidge. Further satisfaction when cure is don.”[620]
-
-Footnote 617:
-
- _Ibid._ pp. 518-9. 1652-1654.
-
-Footnote 618:
-
- _Ibid._ p. 519.
-
-Footnote 619:
-
- _Sussex Arch. Coll._, Vol. XX., p. 114. _Account Book of Cowden_,
- 1690.
-
-Footnote 620:
-
- _Somerset Q.S. Records_, Vol. III., p. 212. 1653.
-
-Such entries show that though women may have practised surgery and
-medicine chiefly as domestic arts, nevertheless their skill was also
-used professionally, their natural aptitude in this direction enabling
-them to maintain their position throughout the seventeenth century even
-when deprived of all opportunities for systematic study and scientific
-experiments, and in spite of the determined attacks by the Corporations
-of physicians and surgeons; but their success was owing to the fact that
-Science had as yet achieved small results in the standard of medical
-efficiency.
-
-
- C. _Midwifery._
-
-It has been shown that the employment of women in the arts of medicine,
-nursing and teaching was chiefly, though not entirely, confined to the
-domestic sphere; midwifery, on the other hand, though occasionally
-practised by amateurs, was, in the majority of cases, carried on by
-women who, whether skilled or unskilled, regarded it as the chief
-business of their lives, and depended upon it for their maintenance. Not
-only did midwifery exist on a professional basis from immemorial days,
-but it was formerly regarded as a mystery inviolably reserved for women;
-and though by the seventeenth century the barrier which excluded men had
-broken down, the extent to which the profession had in the past been a
-woman’s monopoly is shown by the fact that the men who now began to
-practise the art were known as men-midwives.
-
-The midwife held a recognised position in Society and was sometimes
-well-educated and well-paid. Nothing is known as to the mediæval history
-of midwifery in England; and possibly nothing ever will be known
-concerning it, for the Englishwoman of that period had no impulse to
-commit her experience and ideas to writing. All the wisdom which touched
-her special sphere in life was transmitted orally from mother to
-daughter, and thus at any change, like the Industrial Revolution, which
-silently undermined the foundations of society, the traditional womanly
-wisdom could vanish, leaving no trace behind it. Even in the Elizabethan
-period and during the seventeenth century, when most women could read
-and many could write, they show little tendency to record information
-concerning their own affairs. But the profession of midwifery was then
-no longer reserved exclusively for women. The first treatise on the
-subject published in England was a translation by Raynold of “The Byrth
-of Mankynd.” He says in his preface that the book had already been
-translated into “Dutche, Frenche, Spanyshe and dyvers other languages.
-In the which Countries there be fewe women that can reade, but they wyll
-haue one of these bookes alwayes in readinesse ... it beinge lykewyse
-sette foorth in our Englyshe speeche ... it may supply the roome and
-place of a good Mydwyfe, ... and truly ... there be syth the fyrst
-settynge forth of this booke, right many honourable Ladyes, & other
-Worshypfull Gentlewomen, which have not disdayned the oftener by the
-occasion of this booke to frequent and haunt women in theyr labours,
-caryinge with them this booke in theyr handes, and causyng such part of
-it as doth chiefely concerne the same pourpose, to be read before the
-mydwyfe, and the rest of the women then beyng present; whereby ofttymes,
-then all haue been put in remembraunce of that, wherewith the laboryng
-woman hath bene greatly comforted, and alleuiated of her thronges and
-travayle.... But here now let not the good Mydwyves be offended with
-that, that is spoken of the badde. For verily there is no science, but
-that it hath his Apes, Owles, Beares and Asses ... at the fyrst commyng
-abroade of this present booke, many of this sorte of mydwyves, meuyd
-eyther of envie, or els of mallice, or both, diligented ... to fynde the
-meanes to suppresse ... the same; makyng all wemen of theyr
-acquayntaunce ... to beleeue, that it was nothyng woorth: and that it
-shoulde be a slaunder to women, forso muche as therein was descried and
-set foorth the secretes and priuities of women, and that euery boy and
-knaue hadd of these bookes, readyng them as openly as the tales of
-Robinhood &c.”[621]
-
-Footnote 621:
-
- Raynold, _The Byrth of Mankynd_, Prologue.
-
-It is sometimes supposed that childbirth was an easier process in former
-generations than it has become since the developments of modern
-civilisation. The question has a direct bearing on the profession of
-midwifery, but it cannot be answered here, nor could it receive a simple
-answer of yes or no, for it embraces two problems for the midwife, the
-ease and safety of a normal delivery and her resources in face of the
-abnormal.
-
-No one can read the domestic records of the seventeenth century without
-realising that the dangers of childbed were much greater then than now;
-nevertheless the travail of the average woman at that time may have been
-easier. There was clearly a great difference in this respect between the
-country woman, inured to hard muscular labour, and the high-born lady or
-city dame. The difference is pointed out by contemporary writers. McMath
-dedicated “the _Expert Mid-wife_” to the Lady Marquies of Douglas
-because “as it concerns all Bearing Women ... so chiefly the more Noble
-and Honourable, as being more Excellent, more Tender, and Delicate, and
-readily more opprest with the symptoms.” Jane Sharp confirms this,
-saying that “the poor Country people, where there are none but women to
-assist (unless it be those that are exceeding poor and in a starving
-condition, and then they have more need of meat than Midwives) ... are
-as fruitful and as safe and well delivered, if not much more fruitful,
-and better commonly in Childbed than the greatest Ladies of the
-Land.”[622]
-
-Footnote 622:
-
- Sharp (Jane), _The Midwives Book_, p. 3.
-
-Rich and poor alike depended upon the midwife to bring them safely
-through the perils of childbirth, and it is certain that women of a high
-level of intelligence and possessing considerable skill belonged to the
-profession. The fees charged by successful midwives were very high, and
-during the first half of the century they were considered in no way
-inferior to doctors in skill. It was natural that Queen Henrietta Maria
-should send for one of her own country women to attend her, French
-midwives enjoying an extraordinarily high reputation for their skill at
-this time. The payment in 1630 of £100 to Frances Monnhadice, Nurse to
-the Queen, “for the diet & entertainment of Madame Peron, midwife to the
-Queen,” and further of a “Warrant to pay Madame Peron £300 of the King’s
-gift”[623] shows the high value attached to her services.
-
-Footnote 623:
-
- _S.P.D._ 1630. Sign Manual Car. I., Vol. VII. No. 11.
-
-That English midwives were often possessed of ample means is shown by a
-deposition made by “Abraham Perrot, of Barking parish, Gentleman,” who
-“maketh oath that a month before the fire ... he ... paid unto Hester
-Shaw Widow, ... the summe of £953.6.8.”[624] the said Mrs. Shaw being
-described as a midwife; but relations who were members of this
-profession are never alluded to in letters, diaries or memoirs. From
-this absence of any social reference it is difficult to determine from
-what class of the community they were drawn, or what were the
-circumstances which led women to take up this responsible and arduous
-profession. No doubt necessity led many ignorant women to drift into the
-work when they were too old to receive new ideas and too wanting in
-ambition to make any serious effort to improve their skill, but the
-writings of Mrs. Cellier and Mrs. Jane Sharp prove that there were
-others who regarded their profession with enthusiasm, and who possessed
-an intelligence acute enough to profit by all the experience and
-instruction which was within their reach.
-
-Footnote 624:
-
- _Mrs. Shaw’s Innocency Restored._ 1653.
-
-The only training available for women who wished to acquire a sound
-knowledge of midwifery was by apprenticeship; this, if the mistress was
-skilled in her art, was valuable up to a certain point, but as no
-organisation existed among midwives it was not possible to insist upon
-any general standard of efficiency, and many midwives were ignorant of
-the most elementary circumstances connected with their profession. In
-any case such an apprenticeship could not supply the place of the more
-speculative side of training, which can only be given in connection with
-schools of anatomy where research work is possible, and from these all
-women were excluded.
-
-As has been said, many women who entered the profession did not even go
-through a form of apprenticeship, but acquired their experience solely,
-to use Raynold’s words, “by haunting women in their labours.” In rural
-England it was customary when travail began, to send for all the
-neighbours who were responsible women, partly with the object of
-securing enough witnesses to the child’s birth, partly because it was
-important to spread the understanding of midwifery as widely as
-possible, because any woman might be called upon to render assistance in
-an emergency.
-
-Several handbooks on Midwifery were written in response to the demand
-for opportunities for scientific training by the more intelligent
-members of the profession. One of the most popular of these books, which
-passed through many editions, was published in 1671 by Jane Sharp
-“Practitioner in the art of Midwifery above 30 years.” The preface to
-the fourth edition says that “the constant and unwearied Industry of
-this ingenious and well-skill’d midwife, Mrs. Jane Sharp, together with
-her great Experience of Anatomy & Physick, by the many years of her
-Practice in the art of Midwifery hath ... made them ... much desired by
-all that either knew her Person ... or ever read this book, which of
-late, by its Scarceness hath been so much enquired after ... as to have
-many after impressions.” The author says that she has “often sate down
-sad in the Consideration of the many Miseries Women endure in the Hands
-of unskilful Midwives; many professing the Art (without any skill in
-anatomy, which is the Principal part effectually necessary for a
-Midwife) meerly for Lucres sake. I have been at Great Cost in
-Translations for all Books, either French, Dutch or Italian of this
-kind. All which I offer with my own Experience.”[625]
-
-Footnote 625:
-
- Sharp, Mrs. Jane, _The Midwives Book, or the whole Art of Midwifery
- discovered_.
-
-Jane Sharp points out that midwives must be both speculative and
-practical, for “she that wants the knowledge of Speculation, is like one
-that is blind or wants her sight: she that wants the Practice, is like
-one that is lame & wants her legs.... Some perhaps may think, that then
-it is not proper for women to be of this profession, because they cannot
-attain so rarely to the knowledge of things as men may, who are bred up
-in Universities, Schools of Learning, or serve their Apprenticeship for
-that end and purpose, where anatomy Lectures being frequently read the
-situation of the parts both of men and women ... are often made plain to
-them. But that objection is easily answered, by the former example of
-the Midwives amongst the Israelites, for, though we women cannot deny
-that men in some things may come to a greater perfection of knowledge
-than women ordinarily can, by reason of the former helps that women
-want; yet the Holy Scriptures hath recorded Midwives to the perpetual
-honour of the female Sex. There not being so much as one word concerning
-men midwives mentioned there ... it being the natural propriety of women
-to be much seeing into that art; and though nature be not alone
-sufficient to the perfection of it, yet further knowledge may be gain’d
-by a long and diligent practice, and be communicated to others of our
-own sex. I cannot deny the honour due to able Physicians and
-Chyrurgions, when occasion is, Yet ... where there is no Men of
-Learning, the women are sufficient to perform this duty.... It is not
-hard words that perform the work, as if none understood the Art that
-cannot understand Greek. Words are but the shell, that we oftimes break
-our Teeth with them to come at the kernel, I mean our brains to know
-what is the meaning of them; but to have the same in our mother tongue
-would save us a great deal of needless labour. It is commendable for men
-to employ their spare time in some things of deeper Speculation than is
-required of the female sex; but the art of Midwifery chiefly concerns
-us.”[626]
-
-Footnote 626:
-
- Sharp, Mrs. Jane, _The Midwives Book_, pp. 2-4.
-
-Though the schools of Medicine and Anatomy were closed to women,
-individual doctors were willing to teach the more progressive midwives
-some of the science necessary for their art; thus Culpeper dedicated his
-“Directory” to the midwives of England in the following words:—“Worthy
-Matrons, You are of the number of those whom my soul loveth, and of whom
-I make daily mention in my Prayers: ... If you please to make experience
-of my Rules, they are very plain, and easie enough; ... If you make use
-of them, you wil find your work easie, you need not call for the help of
-a Man-Midwife, which is a disparagement, not only to yourselves, but
-also to your Profession: ... All the Perfections that can be in a Woman,
-ought to be in a Midwife; the first step to which is, To know your
-ignorance in that part of Physick which is the Basis of your Act.... If
-_any want Wisdom, let him ask it of God_ (not of the _Colledg of
-Physitians_, for if they do, they may hap to go without their Errand,
-unless they bring Money with them).”[627]
-
-Footnote 627:
-
- Culpeper, Nich., Gent., Student in Physick and Astrologie, _Directory
- for Midwives_.
-
-Efforts made by Peter Chamberlain to secure some systematic training for
-midwives drew upon himself the abuse, if not persecution, of his jealous
-contemporaries. In justifying the course he had taken he pleads “Because
-I am pretended to be Ignorant or Covetous, or both, therefore some
-ignorant Women, whom either extream Povertie hath necessitated, or
-Hard-heartedness presumed, or the Game of Venus intruded into the
-calling of Midwifry (to have the issues of Life & Death of two or three
-at one time in their hands, beside the consequence of Health and
-Strength of the Whole Nation) should neither be sufficiently instructed
-in doing Good, nor restrained from doing Evil?... The objection infers
-thus much. Because there was never any Order for instructing and
-governing of Midwives, therefore there never must be.... It may be when
-Bishops are restored again, their Ordinaries will come in to plead their
-care. Of what? Truly that none shall do good without their leave. That
-none shall have leave, but such as will take their Oath and pay Money.
-That taking this Oath and paying their Money with the testimonie of two
-or three Gossips, any may have leave to be as ignorant, if not as cruel
-as themselves, ... but of Instruction or Order amongst the Midwives, not
-one word.”[628]
-
-Footnote 628:
-
- Chamberlain (Peter), _A Voice in Rhama, or the Crie of Women and
- Children_. 1646.
-
-The danger which threatened midwives by the exclusion of women from the
-scientific training available for men, did not pass unnoticed by the
-leading members of the Profession. They realised that the question at
-stake did not concern only the honour of their Profession, but involved
-the suffering, and in many cases even the death, of vast numbers of
-women and babies who must always depend on the skill of midwives and
-urged that steps should be taken to raise the standard of their
-efficiency. Mrs. Cellier[629] pointed out “That, within the Space of
-twenty years last past, above six thousand women have died in childbed,
-more than thirteen thousand children have been born abortive, and above
-five thousand chrysome infants have been buried, within the weekly bills
-of mortality; above two-thirds of which, amounting to sixteen thousand
-souls, have in all probability perished, for want of due skill and care,
-in those women who practise the art of midwifery.... To remedy which, it
-is humbly proposed, that your Majesty will be graciously pleased to
-unite the whole number of skilful midwives, now practising within the
-limits of the weekly bills of mortality, into a corporation, under the
-government of a certain number of the most able and matron-like women
-among them, subject to the visitation of such person or persons, as your
-Majesty shall appoint; and such Rules for their good government,
-instruction, direction, and administration as are hereunto annexed.”
-
-Footnote 629:
-
- Cellier (Mrs.). _A scheme for the foundation of a Royal Hospital,
- Harleian Miscellany, Vol. IV. pp. 142-147._
-
- The scheme was well thought out, and some details from it may be given
- here as showing the aspirations of an able woman for the development
- of her profession. Mrs. Cellier proposed that the number of midwives
- admitted to the first rank should be limited to 1000, and that these
- should pay a fee of £5 on admittance and the like sum annually. All
- the midwives entering this first rank should be eligible for the
- position of Matron, or assistant to the Government.
-
- Other midwives may be admitted to the second thousand on payment of
- half the above fees.
-
- The money raised by these fees is to be used for the purpose of
- erecting “one good, large and convenient House, or Hospital,” ... for
- the Receiving and Taking in of exposed Children, to be subject to the
- Care, Conduct and Management of one Governess, one female Secretary,
- and twelve Matron Assistants, subject to the visitation of such
- Persons, as to your Majesty’s Wisdom shall be thought necessary ...
- the children to be afterwards educated in proper Learning, Arts and
- Mysteries according to their several capacities. As a further
- endowment for this institution, Mrs. Cellier asks for one fifth part
- of the voluntary charity collected in the Parishes comprised within
- the Limits of the weekly Bills of Mortality, and that in addition
- collecting Boxes may be placed in every Church, Chapel, or publick
- Place of Divine Service of any Religion whatsoever within their
- limits. The scheme further provides “that such Hospital may be allowed
- to establish twelve lesser convenient houses, in twelve of the
- greatest parishes, each to be governed by one of the twelve Matrons,
- Assistants to the Corporation of the Midwives, which Houses may be for
- the taking in, delivery and month’s Maintenance, at a price certain of
- any woman, that any of the parishes within the limits aforesaid, shall
- by the overseers of the poor place in them; such women being to be
- subject, with the Children born of them, to the future care of that
- parish, whose overseers place them there to be delivered,
- notwithstanding such House shall not happen to stand in the proper
- Parish.” ...
-
- Then follow proposals for the care of the children, requiring that
- they may be privileged to take to themselves Sirnames and to be made
- capable, by such names, of any honour or employment, without being
- liable to reproach, for their innocent misfortune, and that the
- children so educated may be free members of every city and
- corporation.
-
- After the first settlement, no married woman shall “be admitted to be
- either governess, secretary, or any of the twelve principal assistants
- to the Government and that no married person of either sex shall be
- suffered to inhabit within the said Hospital, to avoid such
- inconveniences as may arise, as the children grow to maturity; ... if
- any of these Persons do marry afterwards, then to clear their accounts
- and depart the house, by being expelled the society.”
-
- Among many interesting rules for governing the Hospital, Mrs. Cellier
- appoints “That a woman, sufficiently skilled in writing and accounts,
- be appointed secretary to the governess and company of midwives, to be
- present at all controversies about the art of midwifery, to register
- all the extraordinary accidents happening in the practise, which all
- licensed midwives are, from time to time, to report to the society;
- that the female secretary be reckoned an assistant to the government,
- next to the governess and capable of succeeding in her stead.”
-
- “That the principal physician or man-midwife, examine all
- extraordinary accidents and, once a month at least, read a publick
- Lecture to the whole society of licensed midwives, who are all to be
- obliged to be present at it, if not employed in their practise.” The
- lectures to be kept for future reference by the midwives.
-
- “That no men shall be present at such public lectures, on any pretence
- whatsoever, except such able doctors and surgeons, as shall enter
- themselves students in the said art, and pay, for such their
- admittance, ten pounds, and ten pounds a year.” The physicians and
- surgeons so admitted were to be “of Council with the principle
- man-midwife and be capable of succeeding him, by election of the
- governess, her secretary, twelve assistants, and the twenty-four lower
- assistants.”
-
-Mrs. Cellier succeeded with her proposal, in so far that His Majesty
-agreed to unite the midwives into a Corporation by Royal Charter, but
-there the matter rested.[630]
-
-Footnote 630:
-
- Cellier, (Eliz.). _To Dr. ——, an answer to his Queries concerning the
- Colledg of Midwives_, p. 7.
-
-In France women were more fortunate, for a noted school of midwifery had
-already been established at the Hotel Dieu in Paris, at which every six
-weeks dissections and anatomies were especially made for the apprentices
-of the institution, both past and present.[631] Before entering on their
-profession the French midwives were required to pass an examination
-before the chirurgeons. Their professional reputation stood so high that
-Pechey alludes to one of them as “that most Famous Woman of the World,
-_Madam Louise Burgeois_, late Midwife to the Queen of _France_. The
-praises that we read of all those that ever heard of her are not so much
-a flourish as truth; for her reasons are solid experiences, and her
-witnesses have been all of the most eminent Persons of _France_: and not
-only of her, but as we have already exprest, of the most excellent known
-Men and Women of this Art of other Countries.”[632]
-
-Footnote 631:
-
- Carrier (Henriette.) _Origine de la Maternité de Paris._
-
-Footnote 632:
-
- Pechey, _Compleat Midwife_, Preface.
-
-According to Mrs. Cellier, English midwives were for a time examined by
-the College of Surgeons, but as their records for the years in question
-are missing there is no means of ascertaining the numbers of those who
-presented themselves for examination. She says that Bishops did not
-“pretend to License Midwives till Bp. _Bonner’s_ time, who drew up the
-Form of the first License, which continued in full force till 1642, and
-then the Physicians and Chirurgeons contending about it, it was adjudged
-a Chyrurgical operation, and the Midwives were Licensed at
-_Chirurgions-Hall, but not till they had passed three_ _examinations,
-before six skilful Midwives, and as many Chirurgions expert in the Art
-of Midwifery_. Thus it continued until the Act of Uniformity passed,
-which sent the Midwives back to _Doctors Commons_, where they pay their
-money (_take an oath which it is impossible for them to keep_) and
-return home as skilful as they went thither. I make no reflections on
-those learned Gentlemen, the Licensers, but refer the curious for their
-further satisfaction to the Yearly Bills of Mortality, from 42 to 62;
-Collections of which they may find at _Clerkshall_. Which if they please
-to compare with these of late Years, they will find there did not then
-happen the eight part of the Casualities either to Women or Children, as
-do now.”[633]
-
-Footnote 633:
-
- Cellier (Eliz.). _To Dr. —— an answer to his Queries concerning the
- Colledg of Midwives_, p. 6.
-
-In granting licences to midwives the Bishops were supposed to make some
-enquiry as to their professional attainments. Among the “articles to be
-enquired of” during Diocesan visits was one “whether any man or woman
-within your Parish, hath professed or practised Physick or Chyrurgery;
-by what name or names are they called, and whether are they licensed by
-the Bishop of the Diocesse, or his Vicar Generall, and upon whom have
-they practised, and what good or harm have they done?”[634] And again,
-“whether any in your Parish do practise Physicke or chirurgery, or that
-there be any midwife there, or by what authority any of them do
-practise, or exercise that profession.”[635] But the interest of the
-Bishops was concerned more with the orthodoxy of the midwife than with
-her professional skill.
-
-Footnote 634:
-
- _Exeter, Articles to be enquired of by the Churchwardens._ 1646.
-
-Footnote 635:
-
- _Canterbury, Articles to be enquired._ 1636.
-
-A midwife’s licence was drawn up as follows: beginning:—“Thomas Exton,
-knight, doctor of laws, commisary general, lawfully constituted of the
-right worshipful the dean & chapter of St. Paul’s in London; to our
-beloved in Christ, Anne Voule, the wife of Jacob Voule, of the parish of
-St Gile’s Cripplegat, sendeth greeting in our Lord God everlasting:
-Whereas, by due examination of diverse, honest, and discreet women, we
-have found you apt and able, cunning and experte, to occupy & exercise
-the office, business & occupation of midwife,” and continuing after many
-wise and humane rules for her guidance with an exhortation “to be
-diligent, faithful and ready to help every woman travelling of child, as
-well the poor as the rich, and you shall not forsake the poor woman and
-leave her to go to the rich; you shall in no wise exercise any manner of
-witchcraft, charms, sorcery, invocation, or other prayers, than such as
-may stand with God’s laws, and the king’s,” concluding thus:—“Item, you
-shall not be privy to or consent that any priest or other party shall in
-your absence, or your company, or of your knowledge or sufferance,
-baptize any child by any mass, Latin service, or prayers than such as
-are appointed by the laws of the Church of England; neither shall you
-consent that any child borne by any woman, who shall be delivered by
-you, shall be carried away without being baptized in the parish by the
-ordinary minister where the said child is born.”[636]
-
-Footnote 636:
-
- _Sussex Arch. Coll._, Vol. IV., pp. 249-50. Extracts from Parish
- Registers.
-
-The Bishops’ interest in midwives may have been caused partly by a
-praiseworthy desire to secure an adequate supply for the assistance of
-women in each parish. But from the Church’s point of view, the midwife’s
-chief importance was not due to the fact that the life of mother and
-child might depend on her skill, but to her capacity for performing the
-rites of baptism. The reasons for granting her this authority are
-explained as follows:—“in hard Labours the Head of the Infant was
-sometimes baptized before the whole delivery. This Office of Baptizing
-in such Cases of Necessity was commonly performed by the Midwife; and
-’tis very probable, this gave first Occasion to Midwives being licensed
-by the Bishop, because they were to be first examined by the Bishop or
-his delegated Officer, whether they could repeat the Form of Baptism,
-which they were in Haste to administer in such extraordinary Occasion.
-But we thank God our times are reformed in Sense, and in Religion.”[637]
-Though the midwife was only expected to baptize in urgent cases she
-might strain her privilege, and baptize even a healthy infant into the
-Roman Church. Her power in this respect was regarded with suspicion and
-jealousy by English Protestants, not only because she might
-inadvertently admit the infant to the wrong fold, but because it
-resembled the conferring of office in the Church upon women; however, as
-no man was usually present at the birth of a child, and it was fully
-believed that delay might involve the perpetual damnation of the dying
-infant’s soul, no alternative remained. Peter Heylyn, in writing of
-Baptism, comments on the difficulty, saying that “the first Reformers
-did not only allow the administration of this Sacrament [Baptism] in
-_private_ houses, but permitted it to private persons, even to women
-also.” He continues that when King James, in the Conference at Hampton
-Court, seemed offended because of this liberty to women and laicks, Dr.
-Whitgift, Archbishop of Canterbury, denied that the words gave this
-liberty, and Dr. Babington alledged “that the words were purposely made
-ambiguous as otherwise the Book might not have passed Parliament.” To
-whom it was replied by the Bishop of London that there was no intent to
-deceive any, but the words did indeed “intend a permission of private
-persons to Baptize in case of _necessity_.”[638]
-
-Footnote 637:
-
- Watson, _Clergyman’s Law_, p. 318.
-
-Footnote 638:
-
- _Heylyn (Peter), Cyprianus Anglicus_, p. 27.
-
-The fear of secret baptisms into the Catholic Church is shown in a
-letter which states that “the wief of Frances Lovell esqʳ of West Derhᵐ
-is noted for a recusant. And the said Frances had a childe about three
-yeares past christianed by a midwief sent thither by the La. Lovell, and
-the midwief’s name cannot be learned.”[639]
-
-Footnote 639:
-
- Bacon, (Sir Nat.), _Official Papers_, p. 176. 1591.
-
-It was this danger which led to the prosecution of women who practised
-without licences. The Churchwardens at Lee presented “the Widow Goney
-and the wife of Thomas Gronge being midwives & not sworne.” In Hadingham
-they report “We have two poore women exercising the office of midwives,
-one Avice Rax and the wife of one John Sallerie,”[640] and elsewhere
-“Dorothye Holding wief of Jo. Holding & Dorothye Parkins wief of Wᵐ
-Parkins” were presented “for exercising the office of midwives without
-License.”[641]
-
-Footnote 640:
-
- _S.P.D._, ccxcvi., 17. August 21, 1635. _Visitation presentments by
- the Churchwardens._
-
-Footnote 641:
-
- _S.P.D._, ccxcv., 6. August 19, 1636.
-
-The fees charged by midwives varied from £300 in the case of the French
-Midwife who attended the Queen, to the sum of 1s. 6d. paid by the Parish
-of Aspenden to the midwife who delivered a woman “received by virtue of
-a warrant from the justices.”[642] In most cases the amount paid by the
-parents was supplemented by gifts from the friends and relations who
-attended the christening.[643] Thus the baby’s death meant a
-considerable pecuniary loss to the midwife. An example of her payment in
-such a case is given in Nicholas Assheton’s diary; he enters on Feb. 16,
-1617. “My wife in labour of childbirth. Her delivery was with such
-violence as the child dyed within half an hour, and, but for God’s
-wonderful mercie, more than human reason could expect, shee had dyed,
-... divers mett and went with us to Downham; and ther the child was
-buried ... my mother wᵗʰ me laid the child in the grave.... Feb. 24, the
-midwyfe went from my wyffe to Cooz Braddyll’s wyffe. She had given by my
-wyffe xxs and by me vs.”[644]
-
-Footnote 642:
-
- _Hertford County Records_, Vol. I., p. 435. 1698.
-
-Footnote 643:
-
- The Rev. Giles Moore “gave Mat [his adopted daughter] then answering
- for Edwd. Cripps young daughter 5s. whereof shee gave to the mydwyfe
- 2s. & 1s. to the Nurse. Myself gave to the mydwyfe in the drinking
- bowle 1s.” (_Sussex Arch. Coll._, Vol. I., p. 113. _Rev. Giles Moore,
- Journal._)
-
- Later is entered in the Journal, he being god-father “1674. Mat was
- brought to bed of a daughter. Gave the mydwyfe, goodwyfe & Nurse 5s.
- each.” (_Ibid._ p. 119.)
-
- After Lady Darce’s confinement at Herstmonceux Castle, is entered in
- the accounts “paid my Lord’s benevolence to Widdow Craddock the
- midwife of Battle £5. 0. 0.” (_Sussex Arch. Coll._, Vol. xlviii.
- 1643-1649.)
-
- Entries in a similar book of the Howard family give “To my young
- ladye’s midwyfe xxˢ (p. 227-8). To Mrs. Fairfax her Midwife by my Lord
- xxˢ ... by my Ladie xxˢ. More to Mrs. Fairefax her midwife by my
- Ladie’s commaund iijˡⁱ” (_Howard Household Book_, p. 263. 1629.)
-
- Sarah Fell records the presents given to her sister’s midwife—Jan yᵉ
- 1st 1675
-
- by mᵒ Bro. Loweʳ to give Jane Chorley his wifes midwife 1. 00.00
- by mᵒ Motheʳ gave to sᵈ midwife 5. 00
- by mᵒ Sistʳ Sus: sistʳ Rach: & I gave heʳ 5. 00
-
- Dec. 6. 1676. By M° Given ffran. Laite Sister Lowers middwife by
- ffatheʳ & Motheʳ 5s. by sistʳ Sus: 2s. by sistʳ Rach: 2s. myselfe 4s.
- Dec. 10, 1677 by mᵒ Motheʳ gave ffrances Layte when she was middwife
- to Sistʳ Lower of litle Love-day Loweʳ 02.06, by mᵒ sistʳ Susannah
- gave heʳ then 01.00 by mᵒ sister Rachell gave her then 01.00 (Fell,
- Sarah, _Household Accounts_).
-
-Footnote 644:
-
- Assheton (Nicholas), _Journal_, p. 81.
-
-The Churchwardens at Cowden entered in their account book 1627 “Item,
-paide for a poore woman’s lying in 3. 0.” 1638. “to John Weller’s wife
-for her attendance on the widow Smithe when she lay in 2. 0.”[645]
-
-Footnote 645:
-
- _Sussex Arch. Coll_., Vol. XX., p. 101 and p. 104. _Account Book of
- Cowden._
-
-The account book of Sir John Foulis of Ravelstone gives many details of
-the expenses incurred at confinements in Scotland. His wife appears to
-have been attended by a doctor, as well as a midwife, and the latter’s
-fee was the higher of the two. The payments are in Scots money.[646]
-“Mar. 26 1680, to the doctor Steinsone for waiting on my wife in her
-labour 2 guines at 33 P. sterl. p.piece, 27. 16. 0, to Elspie dicksone,
-midwife, 40. 12. 0, to her woman 2. 18. 0.” On November 26, 1692 there
-is another payment “to my wife to give doctor Sibbald for his attendance
-on her in childbed and since to this day 5 guineas 66. 0. 0.” Jan. 31,
-1704 “to my son Wᵐ to give the midwife when his wife was brought to bed
-of her sone Joⁿ 3 guineas 42. 12. 0. to my douchter Crichtoune to give
-the midwife for me halfe a guinie 7. 2. 0.”
-
-Footnote 646:
-
- One pound Scots—20d. sterling.
-
-The size of the gratuities given to the midwife by the friends and
-acquaintances who gathered at a society christening in London may be
-judged from Pepys, who enters in his diary when he was Godfather with
-Sir W. Pen to Mrs. Browne’s child “I did give the midwife 10s.”[647] His
-gratuities to people of lower rank were smaller, and of course the gifts
-made by the “common people” and those of the gentry in the provinces
-were much more modest.
-
-Footnote 647:
-
- Pepy’s _Diary_, Vol. I., p. 308. 1661.
-
-In the latter part of the century there are indications of a growing
-tendency among the upper classes to replace the midwife by the doctor.
-The doctors encouraged the tendency. Their treatises on midwifery, of
-which several were published during this time, deprecate any attempt on
-the midwife’s part to cope with difficult cases. Dr. Hugh Chamberlain
-points out “nor can it be so great a discredit to a Midwife ... to have
-a Woman or Child saved by a Man’s assistance, as to suffer either to die
-under her own hand.”[648] In making this translation of Maurice’s work
-on Midwifery, Chamberlain omitted the anatomical drawings, “there being
-already severall in English; as also here and there a passage that might
-offend a chast English eye; and being not absolutely necessary to the
-purpose; the rest I have, as carefully as I could, rendered into English
-for the benefit of our midwives.”[649] This line of thought is carried
-yet further by McMath, who says in the preface to “The Expert Mid-wife”
-that he has “of purpose omitted a Description of the parts in a woman
-destined to Generation, not being absolutely necessary to this purpose,
-and lest it might seem execrable to the more chast and shamfaced through
-Baudiness and Impurity of words; and have also endeavoured to keep all
-Modesty, and a due Reverence to Nature: nor am I of the mind with some,
-as to think there is no Debauchery in the thing, except it may be in the
-abuse.”[650]
-
-Footnote 648:
-
- Chamberlain (Dr. Hugh). _Accomplisht Midwife: Epistle to the Reader._
-
-Footnote 649:
-
- _Ibid._
-
-Footnote 650:
-
- McMath (Mr. James, M.D.). _The Expert Mid-wife._
-
-The notion that it was indecent for a woman to understand the structure
-and functions of her own body fitted in with the doctors’ policy of
-circumscribing the midwife’s sphere; McMath continues “Natural Labour,
-where all goes right and naturally, is the proper work of the Midwife,
-and which she alone most easily performs aright, being only to sit and
-attend Nature’s pace and progress ... and perform some other things of
-smaller moment, which Physicians gave Midwifes to do, as unnecessary &
-indicent for them, and for the Matronal chastity (tho some of Old
-absurdly assigned them more, and made it also their office to help the
-Delivery, and not by Medicaments only and others, but Inchantments
-also.)”[651]
-
-Footnote 651:
-
- _Ibid._
-
-Clearly in a profession which often holds in its hands the balance
-between life and death, those members who are debarred from systematic
-study and training must inevitably give way sooner or later to those who
-have access to all the sources of learning, but the influences which
-were prejudicing women’s position in midwifery during the seventeenth
-century were not wholly founded on such reasonable grounds; they were
-also affected by much more general, undefined and subtle causes. It may
-even be doubted whether the superior knowledge of the seventeenth
-century doctor actually secured a larger measure of safety to the mother
-who entrusted herself to his management than was attained by those who
-confided in the skill of an experienced and intelligent midwife.
-Chamberlain admits that the practice of doctors “not onely in England
-but throughout Europe; ... hath very much caused the report, that where
-a man comes, one or both [mother or child] must necessarily dye; and
-makes many for that reason forbear sending, untill either be dead or
-dying.”[652] He continues “my Father, Brothers and myself (though none
-else in Europe that I know) have by God’s blessing, and our industry,
-attained to, and long practised a way to deliver a woman in this case
-without any prejudice to her or her Infant.”
-
-Footnote 652:
-
- Chamberlain (Hugh). _Accomplisht Midwife: Epistle to Reader._
-
-The discovery to which Chamberlain refers was the use of forceps, which
-he and his family retained as a profound secret. Therefore this
-invention did not rank among the advantages which other doctors
-possessed over midwives at this period. Even when, a century later, the
-use of forceps became generally understood, the death rate in childbed
-was not materially reduced, for it was only with the discovery of the
-value of asepsis that this heavy sacrifice was diminished. We must
-therefore look for the explanation of the growing ascendancy of male
-practitioners to other causes beside the hypothetical standard of their
-greater efficiency. Their prestige rested partly on an ability to use
-long words which convinced patients of their superior wisdom; it was
-defended by what was fast becoming a powerful corporation; and more
-potent in its effect was the general deterioration in the position of
-women which took place during the century. A lessening of confidence in
-womanly resourcefulness and capacity in other walks of life, could not
-fail to affect popular estimation of their value here too; and added to
-this were the morbid tendencies of the increasing numbers of oversexed
-society women who were devoted to a life of pleasure. The fact that
-similar tendencies were visible in France, where an excellent scientific
-training was open to women, shows that the capture of the profession by
-men was not only due to superior skill.
-
-The famous French Midwife, Madame Bourgeois, told her daughter “There is
-a great deal of artifice to be used in the pleasing of our Women,
-especially the young ones, who many times do make election of Men to
-bring them to bed. I blush to speak of them, for I take it to be a great
-peice of impudence to have any recourse unto them, unless it be a case
-of very great danger. I do approve, I have approved of it, and know that
-it ought to be done, so that it be concealed from the Woman all her life
-long; nor that she see the surgeon any more.”[653]
-
-Footnote 653:
-
- Pechey, _Compleat Midwife_, p. 349. Secrets of Madame Louyse
- Bourgeois, midwife to the Queen of France, which she left to her
- Daughter as a guide for her.
-
-Whatever may have been the explanation, midwifery had ceased to be a
-monopoly for women when the “man-midwife” made his appearance in the
-sixteenth century, but it is only in the latter half of the seventeenth
-century that the profession passes definitely under the control of men.
-The doctors who then secured all the more profitable class of work, were
-united in a corporation which was often directed by men possessed of a
-disinterested enthusiasm for truth, and considerable proficiency in
-their art, even though many in their ranks might regard their profession
-merely as a means for acquiring personal fame or wealth. But the
-interest of the corporations of physicians and surgeons was centred more
-upon their profession than upon the general well-being of the community,
-and they did not regard it as part of their duty to secure competent
-assistance in childbirth for every woman in the community. They took a
-keen professional interest in the problems of midwifery, but the
-benefits of their research were only available for the wives or
-mistresses of rich men who could afford to pay high fees. Far from
-making any effort to provide the same assistance for the poor, the
-policy of the doctors, with some exceptions, was to withold instruction
-from the midwives on whom the poor depended, lest their skill should
-enable them to compete with themselves in practice among the wealthy.
-
-
- _Conclusion._
-
-The foregoing examination of the character and extent of women’s
-professional services has brought several interesting points to light.
-It has been shown that when social organisation rested upon the basis of
-the family, as it chiefly did up to the close of the Middle Ages, many
-of the services which are now ranked as professional were thought to be
-specially suited to the genius of women, and were accordingly allotted
-to them in the natural division of labour within the family. The
-suggestions as to the character and conditions of these services during
-the Middle Ages, rest upon conjectures drawn from the comparison of a
-few generally accepted statements concerning the past, with what appears
-at the opening of the seventeenth century to be a traditional attitude
-to women, an attitude which was then undergoing rapid modifications. A
-more thorough and detailed examination of their position in the
-preceding centuries may show that it was far less stable than is
-generally supposed, but such a discovery need not disturb the
-explanation which is here given of the tendencies deciding the scope of
-women’s professional activity within in the seventeenth century.
-
-First among these was the gradual emergence of the arts of teaching and
-healing, from the domestic or family sphere to a professional
-organisation. Within the domestic sphere, as women and men are equally
-members of the family, no artificial impediment could hinder women from
-rendering the services which nature had fitted them to perform;
-moreover, the experience and training which family life provided for
-boys, were to a large extent available for girls also. Coincident with a
-gradual curtailment of domestic activities may be observed a marked
-tendency towards the exclusion of women from all interests external to
-the family. The political theories of the seventeenth century regarded
-the State as an organisation of individual men only or groups of men,
-not as a commonwealth of families; in harmony with this idea we find
-that none of the associations which were formed during this period for
-public purposes, either educational, economic, scientific or political,
-include women in their membership. The orientation of ideas in the
-seventeenth century was drawing a rigid line between the State, in which
-the individual man had his being, and family matters. The third tendency
-was towards the deterioration of women’s intellectual and moral
-capacity, owing to the narrowing of family life and the consequent
-impoverishment of women’s education. The fourth tendency was towards an
-increasing belief in the essential inferiority of women to men.
-
-It will be seen that these tendencies were interdependent. Their united
-effect was revolutionary, gradually excluding women from work for which
-in former days, nature, it was supposed, had specially designed them.
-Thus the teaching of young children, both girls and boys, had been
-generally entrusted to women, many men acknowledging in later life the
-excellence of the training which they had received from their mothers,
-and it cannot be doubted that women were upon the whole successful in
-transmitting to their children the benefit of the education and
-experience which they had themselves received. But no amount of didactic
-skill can enable persons to teach what they do not themselves possess,
-and so the scope of the training given by women depended upon the
-development of their own personalities. When family traditions and
-family organisation were disturbed, as perhaps they would have been in
-any case sooner or later, but as they were to a more marked extent
-during the Civil War, the sources from which women derived their mental
-and spiritual nourishment were dried up, and without access to external
-supplies their personality gradually became stunted.
-
-Women were virtually refused access to sources of knowledge which were
-external to the family, and hence, with a few exceptions they were
-confined in the teaching profession to the most elementary subjects.
-Women were employed in the “dames schools” attended by the common
-people, or, when they could read and write themselves, mothers often
-instructed their children in these arts; but the governesses employed by
-gentlefolks, or the schoolmistresses to whom they sent their daughters
-for the acquisition of the accomplishments appropriate to young ladies,
-were seldom competent to undertake the actual teaching themselves; for
-this masters were generally engaged, because few women had gone through
-the training necessary to give them a sound understanding of the arts in
-question. Women were not incapable of teaching, but as knowledge became
-more specialized and technical, the opportunities which home life
-provided for acquiring such knowledge proved inadequate; and
-consequently women were soon excluded from the higher ranks of the
-teaching profession.
-
-The history of their relation to the arts of Healing is very similar.
-Other things being equal, as to some extent they were when the greater
-part of human life was included within the family circle, the psychic
-and emotional female development appears to make women more fitted than
-men to deal with preventive and remedial medicine. The explanation of
-this fact offers a fascinating field for speculation, but involves too
-wide a digression for discussion here, and in its support we will only
-point out the fact that in the old days, when no professional services
-were available, it was to the women of the family, rather than to the
-men, that the sick and wounded turned for medicine and healing. Yet in
-spite of this natural affinity for the care of suffering humanity, women
-were excluded from the sources of learning which were being slowly
-organised outside the family circle, and were thus unable to remain in
-professions for which they were so eminently suited.
-
-The suspicion that the inferior position which women occupied in the
-teaching profession and their exclusion from the medical profession, was
-caused rather by the absence of educational opportunities than by a
-physiological incapacity for the practice of these arts, is strengthened
-by the remarkable history of Midwifery; which from being reserved
-exclusively for women and practised by them on a professional basis from
-time immemorial, passed in its more lucrative branches into the hands of
-men, when sources of instruction were opened to them which were closed
-to women. Just as the amateur woman teacher was less competent than the
-man who had made art or the learned languages his profession, so did the
-woman who treated her family and neighbours by rule of thumb, appear
-less skilful than the professional doctor, and the uneducated midwives
-brought their profession into disrepute. The exclusion of women from all
-the sources of specialised training was bound to re-act unfavourably
-upon their characters, because as family life depended more and more
-upon professional services for education and medical assistance, fewer
-opportunities were offered to women for exerting their faculties within
-the domestic sphere and the general incompetence of upper-class women
-did in fact become more pronounced.
-
-
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-
-
-
-
- Chapter VII
-
- CONCLUSION
-
-Great productive capacity of women under conditions of Family and
-Domestic Industry—no difference between efficiency of labour when
-applied for domestic purposes or for trade.
-
-Rate of wages no guide to real value of goods produced—married women
-unlikely to work for wages when possessing capital for domestic
-industry—Women’s productiveness in textile industries—Agriculture—Other
-industries—Professional services.
-
-Capitalism effected economic revolution in women’s position—By (_a_)
-substitution of individual for family wages—(_b_) employment of
-wage-earners on master’s premises—(_c_) rapid increase of master’s
-wealth.
-
-Exclusion of women from skilled trades not originally due to sex
-jealousy—Women’s lack of specialised training due, (_a_) to its being
-unnecessary; (_b_) the desire to keep wife in subjection to
-husband—Reduction in the value to her family of woman’s productive
-capacity by substitution of wage-earning for domestic industry—Effect of
-her productive energy on her maternal functions and her social
-influence.
-
-
-THE preceding chapters have demonstrated the great productive capacity
-which women possessed when society was organised on the basis of Family
-and Domestic Industry. There was then no hard-and-fast line dividing
-domestic occupations from other branches of industry, and thus it has
-not been possible to discover how much of women’s labour was given to
-purposes of trade and how much was confined to the service of their
-families; but as labour was at this time equally productive, whether it
-was employed for domestic purposes or in Trade, it is not necessary to
-discriminate between these two classes of production in estimating the
-extent to which the community depended upon women’s services. The goods
-produced and the services rendered to their families by wives and
-daughters, must if they had been idle have employed labour otherwise
-available for Trade; or to put the position in another way, if the
-labour of women had been withdrawn from the domestic industries and
-applied to Trade, more goods would have been produced for the market,
-which goods the said women’s families would then have obtained by
-purchase; but while by this means the trade of the country would be
-greatly increased, unless the efficiency of women’s labour had been
-raised by its transference from domestic to other forms of industry, the
-wealth of the community would remain precisely the same.
-
-Nevertheless, in estimating a country’s prosperity domestic production
-is generally overlooked, because, as the labour devoted to it receives
-no wages and its results do not enter the market, there is no mechanical
-standard for estimating its value. For similar reasons Home Trade is
-commonly considered to be of less importance than Foreign Trade,
-because, as the latter passes through the Customs, its money value can
-be much more readily computed, and because the man in the street, like
-King Midas, has imagined that gold is wealth. But we are here
-considering the production of goods and services, not of gold, and from
-this point of view, the woman who spins thread to clothe her family, and
-she who furnishes by her industry milk and cheese, eggs and pork, fruit
-and vegetables for the consumption of her family, has produced exactly
-the same goods, no more and no less, than if she had produced them for
-the market, and whether these goods are consumed by her own family or by
-strangers makes absolutely no difference to their real value.
-
-Neither can the value of a woman’s productive activity be judged by the
-wages she receives, because the value of a pair of sheets is the same,
-whether the flax has been spun by a well-to-do farmers’ wife who
-meanwhile lives in affluence, or by a poor woman earning wages which are
-insufficient to keep body and soul together. The labour required for
-spinning the flax was the same in either case, for there was no
-difference in the type of spinning wheel she used, or in her other
-facilities for work; it was only later, when organisations for trading
-purposes had enormously increased productive capacity by the
-introduction of power and the sub-division of labour, that the same
-productive capacity, devoted to domestic purposes, became relatively
-inferior in results. This change between the relative efficiency of
-domestic and industrial labour could not fail, when it took place, to
-exert a marked influence on the economic position of married women,
-because while their husbands earned sufficient money to pay rent and a
-few outgoing expenses, they had no inducement to work for wages, their
-labour being more productive at home. Women who fed and clothed
-themselves and their children by means of domestic industry gratified in
-this way their sense of independence as effectively as if they had
-earned the equivalent money by trade or wages. Considering the low rates
-paid to women, it may be supposed that few worked for wages when
-possessed of sufficient stock to employ themselves fully in domestic
-industries; on the other hand there were a considerable number who were
-in a position to hire servants, and who, having learnt a skilled trade,
-devoted themselves to business, either on their own account or jointly
-with their husbands.
-
-If the general position of women in the whole field of industry is
-reviewed, it will be seen that, beyond question, all the textile fabrics
-used at this time, with the exception of a few luxuries, were made from
-the thread which was spun by women and children, the export trade in
-cloth also depending entirely on their labour for spinning and to some
-extent for the other processes. In agriculture the entire management of
-the milch cows, the dairy, poultry, pigs, orchard and garden, was
-undertaken by the women, and though the mistress employed in her
-department men as well as women servants, the balance was redressed by
-the fact that women and girls were largely employed in field work. The
-woman’s contribution to farming is also shown by the fact that twice as
-much land was allowed to the colonists who were married as to those who
-were single. The expectation that the women and children in the
-husbandman class would produce the greater part of their own food is
-proved by the very low rate of wages which Quarter Sessions fixed for
-agricultural labour, and by the fact that when no land was available it
-was recognised that the wage-earner’s family must be dependent on the
-poor rate.
-
-Though the part which women played in agriculture and the textile
-industries is fairly clear, a great obscurity still shrouds their
-position in other directions. One fact however emerges with some
-distinctness; women of the tradesman class were sufficiently capable in
-business, and were as a rule so well acquainted with the details of
-their husband’s concerns, that a man generally appointed his wife as his
-executrix, while custom universally secured to her the possession of his
-stock, apprentices and goodwill in the event of his death. That she was
-often able to carry on his business with success, is shown by incidental
-references, and also by the frequency with which widow’s names occur in
-the lists of persons occupying various trades.
-
-How much time the wives of these tradesmen actually spent over their
-husband’s business is a point on which practically no evidence is
-forthcoming, but it seems probable that in the skilled trades they were
-seldom employed in manual processes for which they had received no
-training, but were occupied in general supervision, buying and selling.
-It is not therefore surprising to find women specially active in all
-branches of the Retail Trade, and girls were apprenticed as often to
-shopkeepers as to the recognised women’s trades such as millinery and
-mantua-making.
-
-The assistance of the wife was often so important in her husband’s
-business, that she engaged servants to free her from household drudgery,
-her own productive capacity being greater than the cost of a servant’s
-wages. Apart from exceptional cases of illness or incompetence, the
-share which the wife took in her husband’s business, was determined
-rather by the question whether he carried it on at home or abroad than
-by any special appropriateness of the said business to the feminine
-disposition. Thus, though women were seldom carpenters or masons, they
-figure as pewterers and smiths. In every business there are certain
-operations which can conveniently be performed by women, and when
-carried on at home within the compass of the family life, the work of a
-trade was as naturally sorted out between husband and wife, as the work
-on a farm. No question arose as to the relative value of their work,
-because the proceeds became the joint property of the family, instead of
-being divided between individuals.
-
-With regard to the services which are now classed as professional, those
-of healing and teaching were included among the domestic duties of
-women. Illness was rife in the seventeenth century, for the country was
-devastated by recurrent epidemics of small-pox and the plague, besides a
-constant liability to ague and the other ordinary ailments of mankind;
-thus the need for nursing must have been very great. The sick depended
-for their tending chiefly upon the women of their own households, and
-probably the majority of English people at this time, received medical
-advice and drugs from the same source. Women’s skill in such matters was
-acquired by experience and tradition, seldom resting upon a scientific
-basis, for they were excluded from schools and universities. Acquired
-primarily with a view to domestic use, such skill was extended beyond
-the family circle, and women who were wise in these matters sometimes
-received payment for their services. Midwifery alone was really
-conducted on professional lines, and though practised in former days
-exclusively by women, it was now passing from their hands owing to their
-exclusion from the sources of advanced instruction.
-
-It is difficult to estimate the respective shares taken by men and women
-in the art of teaching, for while the young were dependent on home
-training, they received attention from both father and mother, and when
-the age for apprenticeship arrived the task was transferred to the joint
-care of master and mistress. With regard to learning of a scholastic
-character, reading was usually taught by women to both boys and girls,
-who learnt it at home from their mothers, or at a dame’s school; but the
-teaching of more advanced subjects was almost exclusively in the hands
-of men, although a few highly educated women were engaged as governesses
-in certain noble families where the Tudor tradition still lingered.
-Generally speaking, however, when a girl’s curriculum included such
-subjects as Latin and Arithmetic her instruction, like her brothers, was
-received from masters, and this was equally true in the case of
-accomplishments which were considered more appropriate to the
-understanding of young ladies. Women rarely, if ever, undertook the
-teaching of music, painting or dancing. From these branches of the
-teaching profession they were debarred by lack of specialised training.
-
-Thus it will be seen that the history of women’s position in the
-professions, follows a very similar course to that of the developments
-in the world of Industry; work, for which they appeared peculiarly
-fitted by disposition or natural gifts, while it was included within the
-domestic sphere, gradually passed out of their hands when the scene of
-their labour was transferred to the wider domains of human life.
-
-Capitalism was the means by which the revolution in women’s economic
-position was effected in the industrial world. The three developments
-which were most instrumental to this end being:—
-
-(_a_) the substitution of an individual for a family wage, enabling men
-to organise themselves in the competition which ruled the labour market,
-without sharing with the women of their families all the benefits
-derived through their combination.
-
-(_b_) the withdrawal of wage-earners from home life to work upon the
-premises of the masters, which prevented the employment of the
-wage-earner’s wife in her husband’s occupation.
-
-(_c_) the rapid increase of wealth, which permitted the women of the
-upper classes to withdraw from all connection with business.
-
-Once the strong hand of necessity is relaxed there has been a marked
-tendency in English life for the withdrawal of married women from all
-productive activity, and their consequent devotion to the cultivation of
-idle graces; the parasitic life of its women has been in fact one of the
-chief characteristics of the parvenu class. The limitations which
-surrounded the lives of the women belonging to this class are most
-vividly described in Pepys’ Journal, where they form a curious contrast
-to the vigour and independence of the women who were actively engaged in
-industry. The whole Diary should be read to gain a complete idea of the
-relations of married life under these new circumstances, but a few
-extracts will illustrate the poverty of Mrs. Pepys’ interests and her
-abject dependence on her husband. Most curious of all is Pepys’ naïve
-admission that he was trying to “make” work for his wife, which
-furnishes an illustration of the saying “coming events cast their
-shadows before them.”
-
-“Nov. 12, 1662. much talke and difference between us about my wife’s
-having a woman, which I seemed much angry at that she should go so far
-in it without ... my being consulted. 13th. Our discontent again and
-sorely angered my wife, who indeed do live very lonely, but I do
-perceive that it is want of worke that do make her and all other people
-think of ways of spending their time worse. June 8. 1664. Her spirit is
-lately come to be other than it used to be, and now depends upon her
-having Ashwell by her, before whom she thinks I shall not say nor do
-anything of force to her, which vexes me, and makes me wish that I had
-better considered all that I have done concerning my bringing my wife to
-this condition of heat. Aug. 20. I see that she is confirmed in it that
-all I do is by design, and that my very keeping of the house in dirt,
-and the doing this and anything else in the house, is but to find her
-employment to keep her within, and from minding of her pleasure, which
-though I am sorry to see she minds it, is true enough in a great degree.
-Jan. 14. 1667-8. I do find she do keep very bad remembrance of my former
-unkindness to her and do mightily complain of her want of money and
-liberty, which will rather hear and bear the complaint of than grant the
-contrary.... Feb. 18. a ring which I am to give her as a valentine. It
-will cost me near £5 she costing me but little in comparison with other
-wives, and have not many occasions to spend money on her. Feb. 23. with
-this and what she had she reckons that she hath above £150 worth of
-jewels of one kind or another; and I am glad of it, for it is fit the
-wretch should have something to content herself with.”
-
-While the capitalistic organisation of industry increased the wealth of
-the masters, it condemned a large proportion of the craftsmen to remain
-permanently in the position of journeymen or wage-earners with the
-incidental result that women were excluded from their ranks in the more
-highly skilled trades. Under the old system of Family Industry, labour
-and capital had been united in one person or family group of persons,
-but capitalism brought them into conflict; and the competition which had
-previously only existed between rival families was introduced into the
-labour market, where men and women struggled with each other to secure
-work and wages from the capitalist. The keystone of the journeymen’s
-position in their conflict with capital, lay in their ability to
-restrict their own numbers by the enforcement of a long apprenticeship
-and the limitation of the number of apprentices. On gaining this point
-the journeymen in any trade secured a monopoly which enabled them to
-bargain advantageously with the masters. Their success raised them into
-the position of a privileged class in the world of labour, but did
-nothing to improve the position of the other wage-earners in unskilled
-or unorganised trades.
-
-When their organisation was strong enough the journeymen allowed no
-unapprenticed person to be employed upon any process of their trade,
-however simple or mechanical; a policy which resulted in the complete
-exclusion of women, owing to the fact that girls were seldom, if ever,
-apprenticed to these trades. It has been shown that under the old
-system, craftsmen had been free to employ their wives and daughters in
-any way that was convenient, the widow retaining her membership in her
-husband’s gild or company with full trading privileges, and the
-daughters able, if they wished, to obtain their freedom by patrimony.
-Journeymen however now worked on their masters’ premises, their
-traditions dating from a time when they were all unmarried men; and
-though the majority of them had renounced the expectation of rising
-above this position of dependence, the idea that they should extend
-their hardly won privileges to wife or daughter never occurred to them.
-
-Thus came about the exclusion of women from the skilled trades, for the
-wives of the men who became capitalists withdrew from productive
-activity, and the wives of journeymen confined themselves to domestic
-work, or entered the labour market as individuals, being henceforward
-entirely unprotected in the conflict by their male relations.
-Capitalistic organisation tended therefore to deprive women of
-opportunities for sharing in the more profitable forms of production,
-confining them as wage-earners to the unprotected trades. It would be an
-anachronism to ascribe this tendency to sex-jealousy in the economic
-world. The idea of individual property in wages had hardly arisen, for
-prevailing habits of thought still regarded the earnings of father,
-mother and children as the joint property of the family, though
-controlled by the father; and thus the notion that it could be to men’s
-advantage to debar women from well-paid work would have seemed
-ridiculous in the seventeenth century. Though the payment of individual
-wages was actually in force, their implication was hardly understood,
-and motives of sex-jealousy do not dominate the economic world till a
-later period. While the family formed the social unit the interests of
-husband and wife were bound so closely together, that neither could gain
-or suffer without the other immediately sharing the loss or advantage.
-
-The momentous influence which some phases of Capitalism were destined to
-exert upon the economic position of women, were unforeseen by the men
-who played a leading part in its development, and passed unnoticed by
-the speculative thinkers who wrote long treatises on Theories of State
-Organisation. The revolution did not involve a conscious demarcation of
-the respective spheres of men and women in industry; its results were
-accidental, due to the fact that women were forgotten, and so no attempt
-was made to adjust their training and social status to the necessities
-of the new economic organisation. The oversight is not surprising, for
-women’s relation to the “Home” was regarded as an immutable law of
-Nature, inviolable by any upheaval in external social arrangements.
-
-Thus the idea that the revolution in women’s economic position was due
-to deliberate policy may be dismissed. Capitalism is a term denoting a
-force rather than a system; a force that is no more interested in human
-relations than is the force of gravitation; nevertheless its sphere of
-action lies in the social relations of men and women, and its effects
-are modified and directed by human passions, prejudices and ideals. The
-continuance of human existence and its emancipation from the trammels
-that hamper its progress, must depend upon the successful mastery of
-this as of the other forces of Nature.
-
-If we would understand the effect of the introduction of Capitalism on
-the social organism, we must remember that the subjection of women to
-their husbands was the foundation stone of the structure of the
-community in which Capitalism first made its appearance. Regarded as
-being equally the law of Nature and the Law of God, no one questioned
-the necessity of the wife’s obedience, lip service being rendered to the
-doctrine of subjection, even in those households where it was least
-enforced. Traditional ideas regarded the common wealth, or social
-organisation, as an association of families, each family being a
-community which was largely autonomous, and was self-contained for most
-of life’s purposes; hence the order and health of the commonwealth
-depended upon the order and efficiency of the families comprised within
-it. Before the seventeenth century the English mind could not imagine
-order existing without an acknowledged head. No one therefore questioned
-the father’s right to his position as head of the family, but in his
-temporary absence, or when he was removed by death, the public interest
-required his family’s preservation, and the mother quite naturally
-stepped into his place, with all its attendant responsibilities and
-privileges. In this family organisation all that the father gained was
-shared by the mother and children, because his whole life, or almost his
-whole life, was shared by them. This is specially marked in the economic
-side of existence, where the father did not merely earn money and hand
-it to the mother to spend, but secured for her also, access to the means
-of production; the specialised training acquired by the man through
-apprenticeship did not merely enable him to earn higher wages, but
-conferred upon his wife the right to work, as far as she was able, in
-that trade.
-
-Capitalism, however, broke away from the family system, and dealt direct
-with individuals, the first fruit of individualism being shown by the
-exclusion of women from the journeymen’s associations; and yet their
-exclusion was caused in the first place by want of specialised training,
-and was not the necessary result of Capitalism, for the history of the
-Cotton Trade shows, in later years, that where the labour of women was
-essential to an industry, an effective combination of wage-earners could
-be formed which would include both sexes.
-
-Two explanations may be given for women’s lack of specialised training.
-The first, and, given the prevailing conditions of Family Industry,
-probably the most potent reason lay in the belief that it was
-unnecessary. A specialised training, whether in Science, Art or
-Industry, is inevitably costly in time and money; and as in every trade
-there is much work of a character which needs no prolonged specialised
-training, and as in the ordinary course of a woman’s life a certain
-proportion of her time and energy must be devoted to bearing and rearing
-children, it seemed a wise economy to spend the cost of specialised
-training on boys, employing women over those processes which chiefly
-required general intelligence and common-sense. It has been shown that
-this policy answered well enough in the days of Domestic and Family
-Industry when the husband and wife worked together, and the wife
-therefore reaped the advantages of the trading privileges and social
-position won by her husband. It was only when Capitalism re-organised
-industry on an individual basis, that the wife was driven to fight her
-economic battles single handed, and women, hampered by the want of
-specialised training, were beaten down into sweated trades.
-
-The second explanation for women’s lack of specialised training is the
-doctrine of the subjection of women to their husbands. While the first
-reason was more influential during the days of Family and Domestic
-Industry, the second gains in force with the development of Capitalism.
-If women’s want of specialised training had been prejudicial to their
-capacity for work in former times, such training would not have been
-withheld from them merely through fear of its weakening the husband’s
-power, because the husband was so dependent upon his wife’s assistance.
-There was little talk then of men “keeping” their wives; neither husband
-nor wife could prosper without the other’s help. But the introduction of
-Capitalism, organising industry on an individual basis, freed men to
-some extent from this economic dependence on their wives, and from
-henceforward the ideal of the subjection of women to their husbands
-could be pursued, unhampered by fear of the dangers resulting to the
-said husbands by a lessening of the wife’s economic efficiency.
-
-A sense of inferiority is one of the prime requisites for a continued
-state of subjection, and nothing contributes to this sense so much, as a
-marked inferiority of education and training in a society accustomed to
-rate everything according to its money value. The difference in earning
-capacity which the want of education produces, is in itself sufficient
-to stamp a class as inferior.
-
-There is yet another influence which contributed to the decline in the
-standard of women’s education and in their social and economic position,
-which is so noticeable in the seventeenth century. This period marks the
-emergence of the political idea of the “mechanical state” and its
-substitution for the traditional view of the nation as a commonwealth of
-families. Within the family, women had their position, but neither
-Locke, nor Hobbes, nor the obscure writers on political theory and
-philosophy who crowd the last half of the seventeenth century,
-contemplate the inclusion of women in the State of their imagination.
-For them the line is sharply drawn between the spheres of men and women;
-women are confined within the circle of their domestic responsibilities,
-while men should explore the ever widening regions of the State. The
-really significant aspect of this changed orientation of social ideas,
-is the separation which it introduces between the lives of women and
-those of men, because hitherto men as well as women lived in the Home.
-
-The mechanical State _quâ_ State did not yet exist in fact, for the
-functions of the Government did not extend much beyond the enforcement
-of Justice and the maintenance of Defence. Englishmen were struggling to
-a realisation of the other aspects of national life by means of
-voluntary associations for the pursuit of Science, of Trade, of
-Education, or other objects, and it is in these associations that the
-trend of their ideas is manifested, for one and all exclude women from
-their membership; to foster the charming dependence of women upon their
-husbands, all independent sources of information were, as far as
-possible, closed to them. Any association or combination of women
-outside the limits of their own families was discouraged, and the
-benefits which had been extended to them in this respect by the Catholic
-Religion were specially deprecated. Milton’s statement sums up very
-fairly the ideas of this school of thought regarding the relations that
-should exist between husband and wife in the general scheme of things.
-They were to exist “He for God only, she for God in him.” The general
-standard of education resulting from such theories was inevitably
-inferior; and the exclusion of women from skilled industry and the
-professions, was equally certain to be the consequence sooner or later,
-of the absence of specialised training.
-
-The general effect upon women of this exclusion, which ultimately
-limited their productive capacity to the field of household drudgery, or
-to the lowest paid ranks of unskilled labour, belongs to a much later
-period. But one point can already be discerned and must not be
-overlooked. This point is the alteration which took place in the value
-to her family of a woman’s productive capacity when her labour was
-transferred from domestic industry to wage-earning, under the conditions
-prevailing in the seventeenth century. When employed in domestic
-industry the whole value of what she produced was retained by her
-family; but when she worked for wages her family only received such a
-proportion of it as she was able to secure to them by her weak
-bargaining power in the labour market. What this difference amounted to
-will be seen when it is remembered that the wife of a husbandman could
-care for her children and feed and clothe herself and them by domestic
-industry, but when working for wages she could not earn enough for her
-own maintenance.
-
-This depreciation of the woman’s productive value to her family did not
-greatly influence her position in the seventeenth century, because it
-was then only visible in the class of wage-earners, and into this
-position women were forced by poverty alone. The productive efficiency
-of women’s services in domestic industry remained as high as ever, and
-every family which was possessed of sufficient capital for domestic
-industry, could provide sufficient profitable occupation for its women
-without their entry into the labour market. Independent hard-working
-families living under the conditions provided by Family and Domestic
-Industry, still formed the majority of the English people. The upper
-classes, as far as the women were concerned, were becoming more idle,
-and the number of families depending wholly on wages was increasing, but
-farmers, husbandmen and tradesmen, still formed a class sufficiently
-numerous to maintain the hardy stock of the English race unimpaired.
-Thus, while the productive capacity of women was reduced in the
-seventeenth century by the idleness of the _nouveau riche_ and by the
-inefficiency of women wage-earners which resulted from their lack of
-nourishment, it was maintained at the former high level among the
-intermediate and much larger class, known as “the common people.”
-
-Though from the economic point of view intense productive energy on the
-part of women is no longer necessary to the existence of the race, and
-has been generally abandoned, an understanding of its effect upon the
-maternal functions is extremely important to the sociologist. No
-complete vital statistics were collected in the seventeenth century, but
-an examination of the different evidence which is still available,
-leaves no doubt that the birth-rate was extremely high in all classes,
-except perhaps that of wage-earners. It was usual for active busy women
-amongst the nobility and gentry, to bear from twelve to twenty children,
-and though the death rate was also high, the children that survived
-appear to have possessed abundant vitality and energy. Neither does the
-toil which fell to the lot of the women among the common people appear
-to have injured their capacity for motherhood; in fact the wives of
-husbandmen were the type selected by the wealthy to act as wet nurses
-for their children. It is only among the class of wage-earners that the
-capacity for reproduction appears to have been checked, and in this
-class it was the under-feeding, rather than the over-working of the
-mothers, which rendered them incapable of rearing their infants.
-
-The effect of the economic position of women, must be considered also in
-relation to another special function which women exercise in society,
-namely the part which they play in the psychic and moral reactions
-between the sexes. This subject has seldom been investigated in a
-detached and truly scientific spirit, and therefore any generalisations
-that may be submitted have little value. It will only be observed here
-that the exercise by women of productive energy in the Elizabethan
-period, was not then inconsistent with the attainment by the English
-race of its high-water mark in vitality and creative force, and that a
-comparison of the social standards described by Restoration and
-Elizabethan Dramatists, reveals a decadence, which, if not consequent
-upon, was at least coincident with, the general withdrawal of
-upper-class women from their previous occupation with public and private
-affairs.
-
-Undoubtedly the removal of business and public interests from the home,
-resulted in a loss of educational opportunities for girls; a loss which
-was not made good to them in other ways, and which therefore produced
-generations of women endowed with a lower mental and moral calibre. The
-influence of women upon their husbands narrowed as men’s lives drifted
-away from the home circle and centred more round clubs and external
-business relations. Hence it came about that in the actual social
-organisation prevailing in England during the last half of the
-seventeenth century, the influence or psychic reaction of women upon men
-was very different in character and much more limited in scope, than
-that exercised by them in the Elizabethan period. When considered in
-regard to the historical facts of this epoch, it will be noticed that
-the process by which the vital forces and energy of the people were
-lowered and which in common parlance is termed emasculation, accompanied
-an evolution which was in fact depressing the female forces of the
-nation, leaving to the male forces an ever greater predominance in the
-directing of the people’s destiny. The evidence given in the preceding
-chapters is insufficient to determine what is cause and what is effect
-in such complicated issues of life, and only shows that a great
-expenditure of productive energy on the part of women is not, under
-certain circumstances, inconsistent with the successful exercise of
-their maternal functions, nor does it necessarily exhaust the creative
-vital forces of the race.
-
-The enquiry into the effect which the appearance of Capitalism has
-produced upon the economic position of women has drawn attention to
-another issue, which concerns a fundamental relation of human society,
-namely to what extent does the Community or State include women among
-its integral members, and provide them with security for the exercise of
-their functions, whether these may be of the same character or different
-from those of men.
-
-It has been suggested that the earlier English Commonwealth did actually
-embrace both men and women in its idea of the “Whole,” because it was
-composed of self-contained families consisting of men, women and
-children, all three of which are essential for the continuance of human
-society; but the mechanical State which replaced it, and whose
-development has accompanied the extension of Capitalism, has regarded
-the individual, not the family, as its unit, and in England this State
-began with the conception that it was concerned only with male
-individuals. Thus it came to pass that every womanly function was
-considered as the private interest of husbands and fathers, bearing no
-relation to the life of the State, and therefore demanding from the
-community as a whole no special care or provision.
-
-The implications of such an idea, together with the effect which it
-produced upon a society in which formerly women had been recognised as
-members, though perhaps not equal members, cannot be fully discussed in
-this essay; the investigation would require a much wider field of
-evidence than can be provided from the survey of one century. But from
-the mere recognition that such a change took place, follow ideas of the
-most far-reaching significance concerning the structure of human
-society; we may even ask ourselves whether the instability,
-superficiality and spiritual poverty of modern life, do not spring from
-the organisation of a State which regards the purposes of life solely
-from the male standpoint, and we may permit ourselves to hope that when
-this mechanism has been effectively replaced by the organisation of the
-whole, which is both male and female, humanity will receive a renewal of
-strength that will enable them to grapple effectively with the blind
-force Capitalism;—that force which, while producing wealth beyond the
-dreams of avarice, has hitherto robbed us of so large a part of the joy
-of creation.
-
-
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-
-
-
-
- AUTHORITIES.
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-
-The Proverb Crossed or a new Paradox maintained, etc., Being a Full
- Clear and Distinct answer to a Paper of an English Gentleman, who
- endeavours to demonstrate that it is for the Interest of England,
- that the Laws against the Transportation of Wooll should be
- repealed. _London_ 1677. =712 g. 16 (16).=
-
-Pseudonismus, Considerations concerning Common-fields and Inclosures.
- 1654. =E. 719 (9).=
-
-Ramsey, Wm. History of Worshipful Company of Glass-sellers of London.
- 1898. =8248 g. 19.=
-
-Rawdon, Marmaduke, of York, the Life of. _Ed. by Richard Davies._
- _Camden Society, Vol. LXXXV._ =R. ac. 8113/80.=
-
-Raynold, Thomas. The byrth of Mankynde, otherwyse named the woman’s
- booke, newly set furth, corrected and augmented. _London_ 1545.
- =1177 h. 1.=
-
-Reasons for a Limited Exportation of Wooll. 1677. =712 g. 16 (14).=
-
-Reasons humbly offered to the Honourable House of Commons by the
- Leather-dressers and Glovers. =816 m. 13 (39).=
-
-Remarks upon Mr. Webber’s Scheme and the Draper’s Pamphlet. 1741. =1029
- d. 4 (5).=
-
-Report of Commission on Decay of Clothing Trade. 1622. Stowe =554 fo.
- 45-49.=
-
-Report of the Commissioners on the Condition of the Hand-loom weavers,
- 1841. Mr. Chapman’s Report.
-
-Riley, H. T. Chronicles of the Mayors and Sheriffs of London, 1188-1274.
- _London_ 1863. =9510 h. 12.=
-
-—— Memorials of London and London Life. 1868.
-
-Riley, W. H. Translation of the Liber Albus, of the City of London.
- Compiled 1419, by John Carpenter, clerk, and Richard Whittington,
- Mayor. _London_ 1861. =9510 f. 22.=
-
-Rockley, Francis, Esq., Presenteth that the Revenue of Excise. =816 m. 6
- (2).=
-
-Rogers, J. E. Thorold. History of Agriculture and Prices. _Oxford_
- 1866-1902.
-
-—— Oxford City Documents. 1891. =R. ac. 8126/10.=
-
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- and Marry’d State, in a Funeral Discourse on Prov. 31, 10,
- occasion’d by the Decease of Mrs. Elizabeth Dunton. _London_ 1697.
- =1417 b. 29.=
-
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-
-Salford, The Portmote or Court Leet Records of the Borough or Town and
- Royal Manor of, 1597-1669. _Cheetham Society_ 1902. _Vol. xlvi. new
- series._ =R. ac. 8120.=
-
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- London. _London_ 1743. =1029 d. 4 (3).=
-
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- Ladies. =816 m. 14 (84).=
-
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- by Mrs. Jane Sharp, Practioner in the art of Midwifery above thirty
- years. _London_ 1671. =1177 b. 19.=
-
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- notwithstanding his late Triumphing, by sundry Depositions, making
- out more than ever she by Discourse or writing did positively charge
- upon him. _London_ 1653. =E. 730 596 (8).=
-
-Short Essay upon Trade in General, etc., by a Lover of his Country.
- _London_ 1741. =1029 d. 4 (2).=
-
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-
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-
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- London; being a catalogue of all such persons as he knew in their
- life. _Ed. by Sir Henry Ellis._ _Camden Society_, 1849. =R. ac.
- 8113/44.=
-
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- Girdlers, London. _London_ 1905. =8248 e. 44.=
-
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-
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- qualities of all Herbs and simples usefull in Physick reduced into a
- methodical order, for their more ready use in any sicknesse, or
- other accident of the Body. _London_ 1651. =E. 1258.=
-
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-
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-
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-
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- =11765 d. 17.=
-
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- first MDXCVIII., brought down from the year 1633 to the present time
- by John Strype. _London_ 1720. =1791 d. 5.=
-
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-
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- Burrell, Timothy, Journal of. Vol. III. Danny Papers. Vol. X. East
- Sussex Parochial Documents. Vol. IV. Everenden and Frewen Account
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- of. Vol. II.
-
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-
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- the Peace—_in the vierteljahrschrift für Sozial und
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- 1913.
-
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- Society, Vol. LXII._ 1873 =R. ac. 8045/50.=
-
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- Review, Vol. XIII._
-
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-
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- 1681. =712 g. 16 (20).=
-
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-
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-
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- =G. 10325.=
-
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-
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- Destructive to the Woollen and Silk Manufacturers. 1719. =T. 1814
- (8).=
-
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- City of London. _London_ 1902. =8248 f. 15.=
-
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- =2367 bb. 7.=
-
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- duty, set forth in a collection of ingenious and delightful wedding
- sermons. Original ed., 1607. _London_ 1732. =4454 b. 9.=
-
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-
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- _Ed. by Geo. Roberts._ _Camden Society 1848._ =R. ac. 8113/41.=
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- WAGES ASSESSMENTS.
-
-
- _County._ _Reference._
-
- Buckingham Hamilton, A. H. A., Quarter Sessions Records from
- Queen Eliz. to Queen Anne.
-
- Cardigan Dyson, Humfrey, Proclamations of Queen Elizabeth.
- G6463 (331b.).
-
- Chester Harleian MSS., 2054 (3) f. 5 2b.
-
- Derbyshire Cox, J. C., Three Centuries of Derbyshire Annals.
-
- Devonshire Hamilton, A. H. A., Quarter Sessions Record.
-
- Dorsetshire Sussex Archeological Collections, Vol. I., p. 75.
-
- Essex Ruggles, Thomas, History of the Poor, pp. 123-5.
- 1027 i. 1.
-
- Gloucestershire Rogers, J. E. Thorold, History of Agriculture and
- Prices. Vol. VI., p. 694.
-
- Hertfordshire Hardy, W. J., Hertford County Records.
-
- Kent Rogers, J. E. T., History of Agriculture and
- Prices. Vol. VII., p. 623.
-
- Kingston-upon-Hull Dyson, Humfrey, Proclamations. G6463 (77).
-
- Lancashire Rogers, J. E. T., History of Agriculture and
- Prices. Vol. VI., p. 689.
-
- Lincolnshire Hist. MSS. Com., Duke of Rutland, Vol. I., p. 460.
-
- London Lord Mayor’s Proclamations. 21 h. 5 (61).
-
- Middlesex Hardy, W. J., Middlesex County Records.
-
- Norfolk English Historical Review, Vol. XIII., p. 522.
-
- Rutland Archeologia, Vol. XI., pp. 200-7.
-
- St. Albans Gibbs, Corporation Records.
-
- Somerset Somerset Quarter Sessions Records.
-
- Suffolk Cullum, Sir John., History of Hawstead.
-
- Warwickshire Archeologia, Vol. XI., p. 208.
-
- Wiltshire Hist. MSS. Com. Var. Coll., Vol. I., p. 163.
-
- Worcestershire Hist. MSS. Com. Var. Coll., Vol. I., p. 323.
-
- Yorkshire: Rogers, J. E. T., History of Agriculture and
- East Riding Prices, Vol. VI., p. 686.
-
- Yorkshire: Atkinson, J. C., Yorkshire, North Riding Quarter
- North Riding Sessions Records, Vols. VI. and VII.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- INDEX
-
-
-
- Agriculture, 9, 42-92 _passim_, 93, 150, 292;_seq._,
- _see_ Apprentice, Capitalism, Dairy, Farmer, Husbandman, Labourer,
- Pig-keeping, Poultry-keeping, Spinning, Wages, Wage-earner, Wife,
- Yeoman;
- _conditions for rearing children_, 43, 92.
-
- Alehouse, 91 _seq._, 101, 225, 229, 231-233 _passim_;
- _see_ Brewing, Inn-keeper;
- _livelihood for widows and infirm people_, 230-232.
-
-
- Alewife, 222, 232;
- _see_ Brewing.
-
-
- Apothecaries, 184, 259-263 _passim_;
- _see_ Doctor, Gilds.
-
-
- Apprentice, 6, 26, 112, 144, 156, 185, 195, 211, 213, 293;
- _agriculture_, 59;
- _Gild trades_, _boys_, 163, 165 _seq._, 177, 185, 187, 260, _girls_,
- 10, 150, 166, 175 _seq._, 185, 195, 261, 298;
- _other trades_, _boys_, 159, 185, 214, 226, 261, _girls_, 151, 194,
- 217, 220, 293;
- _retail trades_, 200 _seq._;
- _silk trade_, 138, 141 _seq._;
- _weavers_, 104 _seq._, 122;
- _duties of apprentices_, 5, 157;
- _restriction of numbers_, 10, 156, 188, 298;
- _apprentices of women_, 162, 168 _seq._, 173, 179, 194, 220;
- _of widows_, 104, 162, 168 _seq._, 173 _seq._, 183, 187 _seq._, 190,
- 293.
-
- Apprenticeship, 146, 151, 156, 160 _seq._, 165, 177, 184, 191, 194,
- 196, 200 _seq._, 212-214 _passim_, 234, 261, 269 _seq._, 298, 301.
-
- Apprentice Trade, 106.
-
-
- Aristocracy,
- _see_ Capitalist;
- _character of women_, 38-41, 253, 289, 296 _seq._, 305 _seq._;
- _confinements_, 267 _seq._;
- _occupations_, 14-27, 35, 38, 53 _seq._, 253, 255 _seq._
-
-
- Armourers and Brasiers, 178, 183 _seq._
- _See_ Gilds.
-
- Assheton, Nicholas, 280.
-
- Astell, Mary, 38.
-
- Assize, _of beer_, 224;
- _of bread_, 211.
-
-
-
- Badger, 204 _seq._
-
- Baillie, Lady Grisell, 16, 68, 229.
-
-
- Bakers, 8, 92, 202, 208-215 _passim_;
- _corporations of_, 212 _seq._;
- _restrictions on_, 210, 211, 215;
- _women bake for domestic purposes_, 47, 50, 210, 214;
- _for sale_, 30, 213, 214;
- _wife assists husband_, 211 _seq._, 215.
-
- Baptist, 240.
-
-
- Barber-surgeons, 259-263 _passim_, 265, 276, 284;
- _see_ Gilds.
-
- Barrymore, Lady, 14.
-
- Bedell, Mrs. Eliz., 256.
-
- Best, 60-62 _passim_, 78.
-
-
- Beverley, 180, 183, 211, 221 _seq._
-
-
- Binder, 161, 167.
-
- Birth-rate, 4, 43, 86 _seq._, 305.
-
- Bleacher, 129, 145.
-
- Bookseller, 161, 168.
-
- Bourgeois, Mme. Louise, 275, 284.
-
-
- Borough, 209;
- _see_ Corporations.
-
- Brathwaite, Richard, 29, 53.
-
-
- Brewing, 8, 11, 209, 221-233 _passim_;
- _see_ Alehouse, Alewife, Apprentices, Capitalism, Domestic, Gilds;
- _Brewster_ 11, 155, 221 _seq._, 229;
- _Common Brewers_, 223-227 _passim_, 230;
- _Fellowship of_, 223-226;
- _for domestic purposes_, 5, 8, 47, 50, 210, 223;
- _for retail_, 210, 222-230;
- _for wages_, 229 _seq._
-
-
- Bristol, 103, 134, 182, 185, 191, 232.
-
- Burford, Rose de, 140.
-
-
- Burling, 105 _seq._, 132, 145.
-
-
- Bury, 222.
-
- Bury St. Edmunds, 227.
-
-
- Business affairs of family, 41;
- _see_ Family;
- _managed by wife_, 16, 21 _seq._, 54 _seq._;
- _superior capacity of Dutch women_, 36-38 _passim_;
- _wife unequal to_, 20, 22 _seq._;
- _women’s capacity for_, 20, 34, 38 _seq._
-
-
- Butcher, 155, 202, 209 _seq._, 216-219 _passim_, 221;
- _see_ Apprentices;
- _selling wool_, 107;
- _wage-earners_, 219.
-
- Buttons, 142, 144.
-
-
- Butter, 8, 49;
- _see_ Dairy.
-
-
- Cane-chair bottoming, 195.
-
-
- Capitalism, 6, 300, 308;
- _see_ Capitalistic Organisation, Family Industry, Gilds,
- Industrialism, Linen-manufacture, Silk, Textile Trades, Woollen;
- _definition of_, 7;
- _demand for labour_, 90 _seq._;
- _effect on Domestic Industry_, 8, 11, 94;
- _effect on Family Industry_, 8, 10, 11, 94, 142, 156, 165, 196, 297;
- _effect on Marital Relations_, 40 _seq._, 158, 167, 197, 235, 296,
- 299, 301 _seq._;
- _effect on Motherhood_, 8 _seq._, 11 _seq._, 306;
- _effect on Social Organisation_, 8 _seq._, 40, 148, 300, 306 _seq._;
- _effect on women’s economic position_, 8 _seq._, 10, 92, 94, 96, 98,
- 145 _seq._, 165, 167, 196, 235, 295-299 _passim_, 301, 302, 307;
- _effect on women’s morale and physique_, 41;
- _in agriculture_, 43, 56, 92;
- _in brewing_, 11, 226, 230;
- _in Crafts and Trades_, 156, 158, 165, 196.
-
-
- Capitalists,
- _see_ Aristocracy;
- _Definition of_, 14;
- _idleness of wives and daughters_, 10, 38, 41, 50, 235, 296-298
- _passim_, 305;
- _women’s activity as Capitalists_, 14-41 _passim_.
-
- Capitalistic organisation, 13, 94, 146, 196, 236;
- _see_ Capitalism, Industrialism.
-
-
- Carding, _employment for poor_, 116, 132;
- _men_, 102, 116;
- _women_, 99, 108, 120 _seq._, 141.
-
- Card maker, 190.
-
-
- Carlisle, 44, 53, 153, 201, 203, 211, 215.
-
-
- Carpenter, 170-178 _passim_, 187, 195;
- _see_ Companies.
-
- Carrier of letters, 63.
-
- Cellier, Mrs., 195, 269, 273-276 _passim_.
-
- Chamberlain, Dr. Hugh, 281, 283.
-
- Chamberlain, Peter, 272 _seq._
-
- Chandler, _wax and tallow_, 155, 195, 200, 202.
-
-
- Chapmen, 109, 155, 206.
-
-
- Cheese, 8, 49, 53, 208.
-
-
- Chester, 155, 181, 211, 217, 232.
-
- Child, Sir J., 36.
-
- Child’s coate seller, 176.
-
-
- Children, 22, 45, 88, 147 _seq._, 192-194 _passim_, 196, 256;
- _see_ Agriculture, Apprentice, Capitalism, Cost of Living, Education,
- Family, Father, Housing, Husband, Infant Mortality, Mother,
- Nursing, Poor, Settlement, Wages, Wage-earners, Widow, Wife;
- _attending gild dinners_, 180;
- _employment in agriculture_, 59 _seq._, 64;
- _in textile manufacture_, 9, 97 _seq._, 106, 108, 112-114 _passim_,
- 125, 130-134 _passim_, 140-144 _passim_, 292;
- _reduce women’s wage-earning capacity_, 68 _seq._, 92, 136, 147;
- _right to work in father’s trade_, 156, 165 _seq._, 185;
- _share in family property_, 7, 182;
- _share in supporting family_, 12, 72, 79, 105, 192 _seq._, 293;
- _under-feeding of_, 64, 86 _seq._, 118.
-
- Child-birth, 46, 267, 273, 276, 283, 285;
- _see_ Aristocracy, Common-people, Midwifery.
-
-
- Church, 236-242;
- _supervision of midwives_, 277 _seq._
-
- Clockmakers, 187.
-
-
- Clothiers, 98-102 _passim_, 108-112 _passim_, 117-124 _passim_, 141,
- 147;
- _see_ Poor;
- _force workpeople to take goods for wages_, 117 _seq._;
- _women_, 9, 100-102 _passim_, 124.
-
-
- Cloth-workers, 184.
-
- Coal-owner, 34.
-
-
- Common-people, 3, 257, 305;
- _definition of_, 148, 253;
- _childbirth_, 267-269 _passim_;
- _women’s position controlled by necessity_, 41.
-
-
- Companies, 10, 25-27 _passim_, 189, 207, 212, 259, 260 _seq._;
- _see_ Corporations, Gilds, Apothecaries, Armourers and Braziers,
- Bakers, Barber-surgeons, Binder, Book-sellers, Brewsters,
- Butchers, Carpenters, Clockmakers, Cloth-workers, Cutlers,
- Drapers, Dyers, Embroiderers, Fishmongers, Fullers, Girdlers,
- Glass-sellers, Glovers, Goldsmiths, Gold-wire Drawers, Grocers,
- Joiners, Leather-sellers, Mercers, Merchants, Merchant, Taylors,
- Midwives, Painter-Stainers, Pewterers, Physicians, Point-makers,
- Printers, Publishers, Shoe-makers, Smiths, Stationers, Tailors,
- Upholsterers, Whit-awers.
-
- Congreve, 3.
-
- Contractors, 31.
-
- Cooking, 11.
-
-
- Corporations (Municipal), 151, 199-204 _passim_, 209, 212, 218, 224,
- 263;
- _see_ Boroughs, Companies, Customs, Gilds, Beverley, Bristol, Bury,
- Bury St. Edmunds, Carlisle, Chester, Dorchester, Exeter, Grimsby,
- Hull, Kingston-upon-Hull, Leicester, Lincoln, London, Manchester,
- Norwich, Nottingham, Newcastle-upon-Tyne, Reading, Rye, Salford,
- Salisbury, Sandwich, St. Albans, Sheffield, Southampton, Tiverton,
- Torksey, York.
-
- Cost of living, 68-79 _passim_, 134;
- _diet of children_, 68, 71, 223;
- _servants_, 68;
- _difference between men, women and children_, 71-73 _passim_, 127;
- _Family of three Children_, 68, 73.
-
-
- Cotton trade, 94, 124.
-
- Cowden, parish of, 131, 264, 280.
-
-
- Cows, 45, 47, 53, 55, 57, 209, 292;
- _see_ Dairy, Milking.
-
- Crafts, 10, 150-197;
- _see_ Gilds, Trades.
-
- Craftsman, 10, 197.
-
- Cromwell family, 18, 69.
-
- Culpeper, Nicholas, 271 _seq._
-
- Custom (habit), 155, 158-161.
-
-
- Customs, 160;
- _see_ Corporations;
- _excise_, 140.
-
-
- Cutler, 187.
-
- Cutworks, 32.
-
-
-
- Dairy,
- _see_ Butter, Cheese, Cows, Milking;
- _produce for domestic consumption_, 5, 43;
- _as pin-money_, 54;
- _supplementing family income_, 55;
- _women’s sphere_, 5, 50, 53, 292.
-
- Dant, Joan, 32 _seq._, 206.
-
- Daughters, 176 _seq._, 197 _seq._, 252, 284;
- _see_ Burling, Education;
- _employed in parents’ trade_, 184, _seq._, 195, 200, 217, 298;
- _enters company by patrimony_, 191, 298;
- _hired out as weavers_, 103;
- _sustaining parents_, 115.
-
- Decker, Thos., 158 _seq._
-
- Defoe, Daniel, 96, 115 _seq._, 156 _seq._
-
- Distaff, 13, 48, 107, 111.
-
-
- Doctor,
- _see_ Apothecaries, Barber-surgeons, Physicians, Midwifery.
-
-
- Domestic Industry, 4 _seq._, 8, 40, 47-49, 151, 210, 254, 302;
- _see_ Baking, Brewers, Capitalism, Dairy, Family Industry, Servants,
- Spinning, Textile Trades;
- _definition of_, 4-6 _passim_;
- _drudgery performed by servants_, 156 _seq._, 294, 304;
- _effect on women’s economic position_, 145, 290, 292;
- _girls’ work_, 11 _seq._;
- _men’s work_, 5.
-
-
- Dorchester, 132 _seq._, 185, 200, 217, 261, 263 _seq._
-
-
- Drapers, 184, 200;
- _see_ Gild.
-
- Dunning, Richard, 132.
-
-
- Dyer, 111, 155;
- _of leather_, 158;
- _in Ireland_, 18.
-
-
-
- Education, 36, 242, 286 _seq._, 295, 302-306 _passim_;
- _see_ Apprentice, Children, Mother, Poor Relief, Teaching;
- _arithmetic unnecessary for girls_, 52;
- _industrial_, 71, 130-135 _passim_;
- _influence of domestic and family industry_, 40;
- _institutions_, 239;
- _medical_, 255, 288;
- _nurses_, 249;
- _want of specialised training for girls_, 243, 288, 301, 304.
-
- Embroiderer, 184.
-
- Elizabethan Period, Women of, 2, 3, 9, 38, 41.
-
- Estate Management, 14, 15, 17.
-
- Evelyn, John, 115.
-
- Everenden, 62.
-
- Executrix, 39, 188, 293.
-
-
- Exeter, 206.
-
- Eyre, Adam, 54.
-
-
-
- Farmer, 42-56 _passim_, 108, 155;
- _see_ Agriculture, Capitalism;
- _definition of_, 43;
- _demand for labour_, 81, 83, 90, 91;
- _finds sureties for married labourers_, 83 _seq._;
- _preference for unmarried labourers_, 12;
- _wife’s occupation_, 46-50 _passim_, 111, 112;
- _women’s characteristics_, 43 _seq._
-
- Farrier, 155.
-
-
- Father, 39, 45, 56, 79, 86, 145, 237;
- _deserts starving family_, 118, 148;
- _head of family_, 6, 300;
- _interest in children_, 5, 54, 160, 295;
- _profits of family industry vested in father_, 6, 7, 182, 294, 299.
-
- Falkland, The Lady, 18-20 _passim_.
-
- Falkland, The Lady Letice, 241, 251, 256.
-
- Family, 73, 80, 100, 106, 122, 144, 204, 219, 242, 286, 291, 294, 299,
- 304, 307;
- _see_ Business, Capitalism, Father, Mother, Wages, Wage-earners,
- Widow, Wife;
- _basis of social organisation_, 285, 288, 290, 299 _seq._;
- _chargeable to Parish_, 80-88 _passim_, 134, 142, 146, 204;
- _dependence on wages_, 43, 56, 178;
- _see_ Husbandmen, Wage-earners;
- _size of_, 86 _seq._;
- _traditions lost_, 118, 148, 237, 287.
-
- Family Industry, 6-11 _passim_, 92, 94, 96 _seq._, 102, 142, 151, 156,
- 165, 192 _seq._, 196, 216, 234, 290, 297, 301 _seq._, 305;
- _see_ Capitalism.
-
- Fanshawe, Lady, 22.
-
-
- Fell, Sarah, 17, 51, 255.
-
- Feltmaker, 190.
-
- Fiennes, Celia, 62, 73, 124, 233.
-
- Firmin, Thomas, 135-137 _passim_.
-
- Fishmonger, 219 _seq._
-
-
- Fishwives, 36, 209, 219-221;
- _oyster wives_, 202, 220.
-
- Fitzherbert, Sir Anthony, 46-50, 129.
-
-
- Flax, 64, 146, 246, 291;
- _sowing_, 40, 48, 128.
-
- Foulis, Sir John, 32, 280 _seq._
-
- Foreign Women, _Dutch merchants_, 36 _seq._, 219;
- _Flanders, workers of woollen cloths_, 103;
- _French midwives_, 268, 275, 284.
-
-
- Fullers, 121, 145, 155, 157, 189.
-
-
- Garden, _women’s sphere_, 5, 9, 48, 50, 53, 292.
-
- Gardiner, Lady, 15.
-
-
- Gilds, 10, 141, 150, 154-156 _passim_, 192, 196;
- _see_ Apprentice, Capitalism, Companies, Journeyman, Wife;
- _admission to_, 160 _seq._, 176 _seq._, 179, 191;
- _charters_, 140, 160, 178, 181-183 _passim_; 187, 259;
- _development into Companies_, 158;
- _functions, religious, social and for trade purposes_, 154, 160,
- 171-181 _passim_;
- _revilings_, 172, 182, 183;
- _rules_, 157 _seq._, 179 _seq._, 187;
- _women’s position in_, 150, 154-191 _passim_;
- _in woman’s trade_, 195 _seq._
-
-
- Girdlers, 185, 189;
- _see_ Companies.
-
- Glass-sellers, 187;
- _see_ Companies.
-
-
- Glovers, 181, 185, 191 _seq._;
- _see_ Companies.
-
-
- Gold and Silver Thread, 26, 143-145 _passim_;
- _pauper trade_, 145 _seq._
-
-
- Goldsmith, 184;
- _see_ Companies.
-
- Gold-wire Drawers;
- _see_ Gold and Silver Thread.
-
-
- Grimsby, 31.
-
-
- Grocers, 179, 184, 201 _seq._, 260;
- _see_ Companies.
-
-
-
- Haberdasher, 200.
-
- Hale, Sir Matthew, 79.
-
- Harber, Sylvia, 122 _seq._
-
- Harley, Brilliana Lady, 15 _seq._
-
- Harley, Sir E., 16.
-
- Harrowing, 87.
-
-
- Hawkers, 204-207 _passim_.
-
- Hay-making, 49, 62.
-
- Hellyard, Elizabeth, 34 _seq._
-
- Heylyn, Peter, 54 _seq._, 239, 278.
-
- Heywood, Oliver, 87, 129.
-
- Hobbes, 258, 303.
-
- Holroyd, Joseph, 30.
-
- Home, 4;
- _see_ Industrial Revolution;
- _includes workshop_, 7 _seq._, 156-160 _passim_, 294;
- _men’s sphere as well as women’s_, 303;
- _opportunities for production in home_, 147;
- _wage-earners work away from home_, 296.
-
- Howell, James, 37, 53.
-
-
- Hospitals, 243-249;
- _see_ Nurses.
-
-
- Household, _accounts_, 17;
- _affairs_, 157;
- _of craftsmen_, 158 _seq._;
- _size of_, 15, 50, 99.
-
-
- Housing, 73-81 _passim_.
-
- Huckster, 155.
-
-
- Hull, 30, 212 _seq._
-
-
- Husband, 10, 12, 15, 17, 18, 20, 22-24 _passim_, 34, 39, 46, 49, 88
- _seq._, 95, 118, 171-173 _passim_, 212, 228, 233 _seq._, 240, 306;
- _see_ Wife;
- _acquires wife’s rights_, 161, 213;
- _assists wife_, 199, 214, 301;
- _companionship with wife_, 160, 183, 301-303 _passim_, 306;
- _dependence on wife’s assistance_, 16, 36 _seq._, 46, 153, 165, 194,
- 196, 211;
- _ill-treatment of wife_, 191;
- _independence of wife_, 41, 197;
- _meddles not with wife’s trade_, 231 _seq._;
- _not responsible for wife’s debts_, 151 _seq._
-
-
- Husbandman, 3, 56-64 _passim_;
- _definition of_, 43, 57;
- _girls’ environment_, 87;
- _independence_, 56;
- _rent_, 57;
- _wages_, _men_, 59-62 _passim_, _women_, 60-63 _passim_;
- _wife’s occupation_, 60-64 _passim_, 111 _seq._;
- _wife as wet-nurse_, 58;
- _women’s characteristics_, 58 _seq._
-
- Hutchinson, Mrs. Lucy, 23 _seq._, 255, 263.
-
- Hutchinson, Colonel, 23 _seq._, 252.
-
-
- Keeper of tenis court, 25.
-
- King, Gregory, 55, 80, 86.
-
- Kingston-upon-Hull, 103, 181.
-
- Knitting, 18, 26, 133.
-
-
- Idleness, 138, 253.
-
- Industrialism, 94, 123;
- _see_ Capitalism;
- _attempted introduction of factory system_, 99, 124.
-
-
- Industrial Revolution, 8 _seq._
-
-
- Industry;
- _see_ Domestic, Family, Capitalism.
-
-
- Infant Mortality, 58, 86, 273, 276, 283, 305.
-
-
- Inn-keeper, 155, 209, 213, 225, 227, 233.
-
- Insurance Office, 33.
-
-
- Ireland, 18, 126.
-
- Ironmonger, 155.
-
-
-
- Joiners, 181;
- _see_ Companies.
-
- Jonson, Ben, 28, 257.
-
- Josselin, the Rev. R., 50, 257.
-
-
- Journeyman, 156, 159, 180, 212, 297 _seq._;
- _see_ Widow;
- _employed by women_, 174, 185, 189, 261;
- _organisation of_, 10, 166;
- _wives and daughters excluded_, 10, 166, 197, 234, 298, 301;
- _wife unpaid servant_, 10.
-
-
- Labourer, _see_ Farmer, Husbandman, Wage earner, Wages.
-
- Laundry, _maid_, 50;
- _work_, 5, 13, 49, 135, 155.
-
-
- Law, 236 _seq._
-
- Lace, _see_ Ireland;
- _bone-lace_, 142, 144.
-
-
- Leather-sellers, 158, 185;
- _see_ Companies.
-
-
- Leicester, 210, 222 _seq._
-
- Leland, 99.
-
-
- Lincoln, 157.
-
-
- Linen manufacture, 94, 96, 124-137 _passim_, 138;
- _see_ Drapers, Flax, Poor, Spinning, Weaving;
- _appropriateness to women_, 128 _seq._;
- _capitalistic_, 124, 136;
- _company_, 126-128 _passim_, 136;
- _domestic_, 5, 40, 48, 96, 125, 128, 129, 137;
- _family_, 128;
- _in Ireland_, 126 _seq._;
- _printers_, 126;
- _in Scotland_, 126, 129;
- _wages for spinning_, 48, 95 _seq._, 128-137 _passim_, 146.
-
-
- London, 29, 31, 33, 131, 135, 138-141 _passim_, 152, 158-195 _passim_,
- 202, 206, 208, 217, 220, 233, 243-249 _passim_, 258-263 _passim_,
- 281.
-
-
-
- Malt-making, 47, 49 _seq._, 224-226 _passim_.
-
-
- Manchester, 206, 213, 218, 221.
-
- Mansell, Lady, 35.
-
- Mantua-making, 195, 234, 293.
-
-
- Marriage, 191;
- _see_ Poor relief, Wife, Mother;
- _confers woman’s rights on her husband_, 261;
- _strengthens man’s economic position_, 39.
-
- Married Woman;
- _see_, Mother, Wife.
-
-
- Market, 4, 119, 202, 204, 217, 291;
- _corn-market_, 211;
- _Farmer’s wife attends market_, 49-51;
- _labour market_, 145, 167, 298;
- _price of spinning_, 129;
- _market spinner_, 107, 109 _seq._, 113;
- _town_, 224 _seq._;
- _thread, yarn and wool, sold in market_, 107-109 _passim_, 112, 127
- _seq._;
- _woman_, 135.
-
- Martindale, Adam, 55, 257.
-
- McMath, James, 267, 282.
-
-
- Medicine, 242, 253-265 _passim_, 286, 288, 294;
- _see_ Poor, Servants;
- _domestic practice_, 242, 254-257 _passim_;
- _education of women_, 255, 294;
- _their exclusion from schools_, 254, 265, 294;
- _fees_, 262, 264;
- _Licensed by Bishop_, 276;
- _professional practice_, 242, 254, 257-259 _passim_, 263 _seq._;
- _restrictions on women_, 259 _seq._;
- _women’s skill extended to neighbours_, 255-257 _passim_, 294.
-
-
- Mercers, 184, 201.
-
-
- Merchant, 29, 36, 140, 155, 180-184 _passim_;
- _see_ Joan Dant.
-
- Middle-man, 110, 124;
- _see_ Market spinner.
-
-
- Midwife, 258;
- _see_ Midwifery;
- _Baptism by_, 277-279 _passim_;
- _Fees_, 268, 279-281 _passim_;
- _Licences_, 272-279 _passim_;
- _Man-midwife_, 265, 271 _seq._, 284;
- _Prosecutions of_, 279.
-
-
- Midwifery, 242 _seq._, 265-285, 288;
- _see_ Midwife;
- _chiefly professional_, 265;
- _doctor’s assistance_, 271, 280-284 _passim_;
- _French_, 268, 275, 279, 284;
- _training of women_ for, 269-275 _passim_, 288.
-
-
- Milking, 47.
-
- Mill, 47, 210, 215 _seq._
-
-
- Miller, 209, 212, 215 _seq._;
- _wages of_, 66.
-
- Milliner, 176, 195, 234, 293.
-
- Milton, John, 240, 304.
-
-
- Money-lender, 28 _seq._,
- _see_ Pawnbroker.
-
- Monopolies and patents, 25-28 _passim_.
-
- Moore, Rev. Giles, 252.
-
-
- Mother, 43, 63 _seq._, 73, 125, 196, 198, 214;
- _see_ Capitalism, Domestic Industry, Spinning, Wages, Widow, Wife;
- _desertion of children_, 86;
- _educating children_, 21, 95, 159, 242, 286, 295;
- _head of family_, 7, 234, 300;
- _sharing father’s work_, 6 _seq._;
- _supporting family_, 12, 29, 55, 64, 78 _seq._, 114, 178, 192-194
- _passim_, 198;
- _tending children_, 47, 63, 95;
- _under-feeding_, 87-89 _passim_, 306;
- _value of productive activity_, 145, 290 _seq._, 304;
- _worship of_, 238 _seq._
-
-
- Motherhood, women’s capacity for, 8 _seq._, 58, 87, 305.
-
- Murray, Lady, 16.
-
-
- Needlework, 13.
-
- Netmaker, 155.
-
-
- Newcastle-upon-Tyne, 34, 226.
-
- Nicholson, Dame Margaret, 60.
-
-
- Norwich, 107, 116, 219, 229.
-
-
- Nottingham, 130, 201, 217, 232.
-
-
- Nurse, _sick_, 13, 135, 155;
- _salaries_, 243-246 _passim_, 248, 250 _seq._
-
-
- _Nursing_, 242-253;
- _see_ Poor, Servants.
-
-
- Ogden, Hester, 164.
-
- Orphan, _see_ Children, Poor Relief.
-
- Osborne, Dorothy, 57.
-
-
- Painter-Stainer, 188.
-
- Paper-maker, 32.
-
- Pauper, _see_ Poor.
-
- Pawnbroker, 28 _seq._;
- _see_ Money-lender.
-
- Pechey, 275.
-
-
- Pedlar, 32, 204-207 _passim_.
-
- Pepys Samuel, 3, 38 _seq._, 59, 62, 281, 296 _seq._
-
- Peronne, Mme., 268.
-
-
- Petitions, _from women_, 23-27 _passim_, 118, 121, 138;
- _of married woman objected to_, 77.
-
- Petty, Dorothy, 33 _seq._
-
-
- Pewterers, 183, 186 _seq._, 191, 210, 294;
- _see_ Companies.
-
-
- Physicians, 259, 262, 265, 271, 275 _seq._, 284.
-
- Politics, _see_ Petitions;
- _women’s interest in_, 23 _seq._
-
-
- Pig-keeping, 5, 48, 52 _seq._, 292.
-
- Pin-maker, 193.
-
- Point-maker, 191.
-
-
- Poor,
- _see_ Hospitals, Midwife, Silk, Spinning, Wages, Wage-earners;
- _census of_, 219;
- _clothiers’ poor_, 109;
- _confinements_, 277, 280;
- _education of_, 130-134 _passim_;
- _increased wages_, 115;
- _medical attendance_, 255 _seq._, 263-265 _passim_;
- _not all vagrants_, 135;
- _nursing_, 243, 251 _seq._;
- _relief_, 69-92 _passim_, 118, 129-137 _passim_, 204;
- _set on work_, 110, 120, 130-137 _passim_, 140, 148;
- _synonymous with pauper_, 148;
- _widows and orphans maintained by parish_, 204;
- _workhouse_, 72, 131-134 _passim_.
-
-
- Poultry-keeping, 5, 48, 50, 87, 209, 292.
-
- Pregnancy, 24, 72 _seq._, 82, 89.
-
- Printer, 161-167;
- _see_ Companies.
-
- Professions, 5, 236-289 _passim_;
- _see_ Church, Education, Law, Medicine, Midwifery, Nursing, Teaching;
- _services_, 4 _seq._, 294 _seq._;
- _women’s position in_, 13, 304.
-
- Projector, 28.
-
- Provision Trades, 150, _seq._, 209-234 _passim_;
- _see_ Alehouse, Alewife, Apprentice, Bakers, Brewing, Butcher,
- Fishwife, Inn-keeper, Malt-making, Miller, Retail Trades, Vintner,
- Wife, Widow;
- _women’s position in_, 10 _seq._
-
- Publisher, 167;
- _see_ Companies.
-
- Pulling pease, 61 _seq._
-
-
- Quakers, 51, 168, 199, 240;
- _see_ Fell;
- _Adams (wife of John)_, 153;
- _Banks, (wife of John)_, 44;
- _Batt, Mary_, 45 _seq._;
- _Bownas (wife of Samuel)_, 52;
- _Townsend, Will., marriage of_, 190.
-
-
- Rawdon, Marmaduke, 257.
-
- Raynold, 266 _seq._, 269.
-
- Reading, 85, 132, 189, 203 _seq._, 213, 216, 249 _seq._
-
- Regrater, 204 _seq._, 207-209 _passim_, 218 _seq._
-
- Religion, _independence of married women_, 240.
-
- Restoration Period, _women of_, 2, 9, 38, 41.
-
-
- Retail Trade, 197-209 _passim_;
- _see_ Chapmen, Badger, Haberdashers, Hawkers, Pedlars, Regrater,
- Shopkeepers;
- _women’s position in_, 10 _seq._, 150 _seq._, 156, 172, 197, 209,
- 293.
-
- Rous, Margaret, 17.
-
-
- Rye, 152 _seq._
-
-
- Salford, 52 _seq._, 84, 212.
-
-
- Salisbury, 184, 213, 258 _seq._
-
- Salisbury, Earl of, 25, 111.
-
-
- Sandwich, 152.
-
- Salt concerns, 17 _seq._
-
- Scotland, 126, 129.
-
- Scottish, 140.
-
- Semptsress, 155, 175 _seq._, 202, 221.
-
-
- Servants, 5 _seq._, 26, 155 _seq._, 176, 187, 202, 220, 241;
- _see_ Brewing, Journeyman, Wages, Wages assessments;
- _diet of_, 68, 88;
- _dresses_, 126;
- _employed in domestic drudgery_, 5, 157, 196, 292, 294;
- _employed in spinning_, 125;
- _farm_, 47, 50, 116, 210, 229;
- _married_, 81, 88;
- _scarcity of_, 56;
- _housekeepers’ duties_, 255;
- _medical attendance on_, 252, 263;
- _men servants brought up by women_, 141;
- _of clothiers_, 101;
- _nursing of_, 251 _seq._;
- _shoemaker_, 66, 203;
- _training of_, 253;
- _women, scarcity of_, 157.
-
- Sex-jealousy, _an anachronism_, 299;
- _absence in woollen trade_, 95, 123;
- _exclusion of women from trades_, 103, 105, 106, 191.
-
- Shakespeare, 3.
-
- Sharp, Jane, 269-271 _passim_.
-
- Shearing, _corn_, 49, 60;
- _sheep_, 62.
-
-
- Sheffield, 187.
-
- Shepherd, 62.
-
- Shipping, 29-31 _passim_.
-
- Shoemaker, 155, 158 _seq._, 184, 202 _seq._;
- _see_ Servants.
-
-
- Shopkeeper, 158, 168, 198-209 _passim_.
-
-
- Silk manufacture, 94, 126, 138-143;
- _see_ Apprentice, Poor, Textiles, Weaving;
- _capitalistic_, 142;
- _occupation of gentlewomen_, 10, 138-140 _passim_, 142;
- _refuge of paupers_, 140-142 _passim_, 146;
- _silk women_, 140;
- _stockings_, 26 _seq._;
- _wages_, 142.
-
-
- Smith, 155, 189, 210, 259, 294.
-
- Social position of women, 8, 40, 249, 283, 306 _seq._
-
- Southampton, 101, 195 _seq._
-
-
- Spinning, 5;
- _see_ Poor, Linen-manufacture, Woollen;
- _demand for_, 95, 110, 112 _seq._, 124, 129, 146;
- _domestic industry_, 9, 40, 64, 96, 125, 129, 137, 147, 291 _seq._;
- _employment of poor_, 13, 100, 110 _seq._, 128-137 _passim_, 146
- _seq._, 209, 291;
- _instruction in_, 13, 111, 130-137;
- _monopoly of women and children_, 93, 102, 145, 292;
- _organisation of_, 107-113, 123 _seq._;
- _resource for mothers_, 9, 13, 63, 95, 151, 209;
- _wages_;
- _withdraws women from agriculture and service_, 112, 115.
-
-
- Spinner, 18, 102, 110, 113, 117, 120, 128 _seq._, 141, 221;
- _market spinner_, 107, 109 _seq._, 113.
-
- Spinster, 95 _seq._, 107-109 _passim_, 112-136 _passim_, 147, 155, 221;
- _classes of_, 111 _seq._
-
- Spreading muck, 62.
-
-
- St. Albans, 202.
-
- Stapley, Richard, 125.
-
- State, 242, 286, 299, 303, 307 _seq._
-
-
- Stationers, 158, 161-170 _passim_;
- _see_ Companies.
-
- Stumpe, 99;
- _see_ Clothier.
-
- Suckle calves, 47.
-
- Surgeons, _see_ Barber-surgeons.
-
- Surgery, _see_ Medicine.
-
-
-
- Tailor, 155, 181.
-
- Tanner, 185.
-
- Thatching, 61.
-
- Taylor, Randall, 58.
-
-
- Teaching, 242, 265, 286 _seq._, 294 _seq._
-
-
- Textile Trades, 9, 93-149 _passim_, 150;
- _see_ Burling, Capitalism, Carding, Clothiers, Cotton, Domestic
- Industry, Family Industry, Fuller, Gold and Silver, Knitting,
- Linen-manufacture, Silk, Spinning, Spinner, Weaver, Wage-earner,
- Wages, Woollen;
- _industrial organisation of_, 96;
- _proportion of women’s labour_, 93 _seq._, 97 _seq._, 114, 133
- _seq._, 292;
- _proportion of children’s labour_, 108, 112, 114, 116, 133 _seq._;
- _women’s position in_, 93 _seq._, 95, 146.
-
- Thierry, Rachel, 100 _seq._
-
- Thornton, Mrs. Alice, 16.
-
-
- Tiverton, 227.
-
- Tobacco pipe makers, 192.
-
-
- Torksey, 222.
-
-
- Trades;
- _see_ Crafts, Provision, Retail Textile;
- _women’s occupation in_, 10, 146, 293.
-
- Turbeville, Mrs. Mary, 258 _seq._
-
-
-
- Upholsterer, 184, 195.
-
-
- Vantrollier (wife of Thos.), 163.
-
- Verney, Lady, 20;
- _Sir Edmund_, 15;
- _Sir Ralph_, 15, 20, 258.
-
-
- Vintners, 209, 233 _seq._
-
- Village Community, 56, 253;
- _disintegration of_, 148;
- _vigorous stock of_, 42;
- _women’s influence in_, 148.
-
- Vives, 37.
-
-
-
- Wage-earner, 4, 6, 64-92 _passim_, 99;
- _see_ Agriculture, Birth-rate, Butcher, Capitalism, Children, Infant
- Mortality, Journeyman, Marriage, Motherhood, Spinning, Silk,
- Textile-Manufactures, Wages, Widow, Wife, Woollen;
- _definition of_, 43, 65;
- _children of_, 86 _seq._;
- _class of undesirables_, 90;
- _combination among_, 121-124 _passim_, 298, 301;
- _family income_, 65-69 _passim_, 71, 79 _seq._, 178;
- _insolvency_, 80-92 _passim_, 129, 146-149, 209, 293;
- _numbers of_, 4, 90 _seq._, 305;
- _wife of_, 9 _seq._, 76-89 _passim_, 235;
- _her earning capacity_, 68 _seq._, 89, 92, 147 _seq._, 209, 292;
- _her virtual exclusion from skilled trades_, 298.
-
-
- Wages, 35, 59, 65, 100, 301;
- _see_ Brewing, Carpenters, Doctors, Husbandmen, Linen-manufacture,
- Nurse (sick), Midwife, Miller, Poor, Spinning, Silk, Woollen;
- _assessments_, 50, 59 _seq._, 62, 65-67 _passim_, 72, 83, 90, 210,
- 293;
- _difference between family and individual wages_, 7, 296, 299;
- _day labourers, men_, 9, 56, 60-62 _passim_, 65 _seq._, 96;
- _day labourers, women_, 9, 60-66 _passim_, 68, 72, 89;
- _servants, men_, 50, 56, 65 _seq._;
- _servants, women_, 50, 65, 157;
- _married men_, 65 _seq._;
- _not expected to keep family_, 12, 86, 90, 293;
- _relation to cost of living_, 10, 68 _seq._, 79 _seq._, 83, 89, 95,
- 130, 134-137 _passim_, 145, 178;
- _women’s, do not represent value of their work_, 64, 137, 145, 291
- _seq._, 304.
-
-
- Weaver, 155, 259;
- _see_ Apprentice;
- _assault women_, 126;
- _complaints against clothiers_, 114, 117-123 _passim_,
- _domestic purposes_, 40, 64, 125;
- _linen_, 18, 124 _seq._, 128, 136;
- _women_, 129;
- _woollen_, 18, 99, 111, 116;
- _women_, 102-106, 145;
- _forbidden to weave cloth_, 103;
- _widow_, 103 _seq._;
- _ribbons and tape_; 104;
- _silk_, 138, 141;
- _Wages_, 120, 149.
-
- _Webber_, 102, 221;
- _see_ Weaver.
-
- Webster, 102, 155, 221;
- _see_ Weaver.
-
- Weeding, 62, 89.
-
- Wet-nurse, 26, 58.
-
- Whipping dogs out of Church, 63.
-
-
- Whit-awers, 191.
-
- Winchcombe, John, 99.
-
- Winnowing, 49.
-
-
- Widow, 29, 33, 45, 86, 100, 122, 129, 137, 156, 171, 177, 189 _seq._,
- 195, 200, 201, 204 _seq._, 209, 213, 216, 218, 227, 230, 249-252
- _passim_, 264, 268;
- _see_ Apprentice, Housing, Journeymen, Poor Relief, Weaver;
- _dependence on journeymen_, 185, 189, _seq._, 261;
- _membership in late husband’s gild_, 160 _seq._, 168, 174, 176
- _seq._, 179 _seq._, 183, 185, 187, 233 _seq._, 261, 298;
- _pensions_ to, 69, _seq._ 170;
- _of soldiers_, 248 _seq._;
- _succession to late husband’s business_, 11, 30-34 _passim_, 104
- _seq._, 151, 154 _seq._, 160-163 _passim_, 167-173 _passim_, 188
- _seq._, 215, 217, 221, 293.
-
-
- Wife, 45, 70, 216, 237, 280;
- _see_ Alehouse, Bakers, Business, Capitalist, Dairy, Doctor,
- Domestic, Farmer, Household Management, Husbandman, Journeyman,
- Mother, Pig-keeping, Poultry-keeping, Shop-keeper, Sick nursing,
- Spinning, Wage-earner;
- _economic position of_, 11, 292;
- _membership in husband’s gild_, 150, 160, 171 _seq._, 179 _seq._,
- 191, 261, 301;
- _mutual dependence of husband and wife_, 12, 41, 44, 49, 54 _seq._,
- 300-302 _passim_;
- _pauperisation of wife_, 92, 147, 149;
- _wife provides food and clothes for family_, 12 _seq._, 39, 60, 63,
- 90, 94 _seq._, 106, 112, 125, 137, 145, 291, 293, 304;
- _separate business_, 17, 40, 151-156 _passim_, 165, 175-178 _passim_,
- 194 _seq._, 202 _seq._, 206, 208, 214, 219, 221, 228 _seq._, 231;
- _settlement_, 80-89 _passim_;
- _soldier’s wife_, 142;
- _subjection to husband_, 16, 35, 41, 45, 197, 240, 302-304 _passim_;
- _working in husband’s business_, 29, 34 _seq._, 40 _seq._, 45, 95,
- 100-102 _passim_, 144, 151, 153-159 _passim_, 163, 172 _seq._,
- 175, 184-187 _passim_, 192 _seq._, 196 _seq._, 202 _seq._, 212,
- 215 _seq._, 220 _seq._, 229, 234 _seq._, 293 _seq._, 302.
-
-
- Woollen manufacture, 42, 94, 97-124 _passim_, 126, 129, 138;
- _see_ Clothiers, Drapers, Poor, Spinning, Weaver;
- _capitalistic_, 94, 96 _seq._, 123 _seq._, 147;
- _domestic_, 49, 106;
- _family_, 97, 106;
- _dependence on women’s and children’s labour_, 97 _seq._, 112, 114;
- _fluctuations in trade_, 98 _seq._, 110 _seq._, 118-122 _passim_, 147
- _seq._;
- _instruction in_, 110 _seq._;
- _men and women wage-earners unite in trade disputes_, 116-123
- _passim_;
- _political power_, 126;
- _wages for spinning_, 49, 95-97 _passim_, 100, 108 _seq._, 113-118
- _passim_, 120, 122 _seq._, 124, 134 _seq._, 137;
- _women’s position in_, 98, 102 _seq._, 106, 124;
- _wool-combers_, 155.
-
- Wycherley, 3, 37.
-
-
- Yeoman, 9, 50, 76, 90.
-
-
- York, 212.
-
-
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-
-
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- LIST OF STUDIES IN ECONOMICS AND POLITICAL SCIENCE.
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- London School of Economics and Political Science._
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-=1. The History of Local Rates in England.= The substance of five
-lectures given at the School in November and December, 1895. By EDWIN
-CANNAN, M.A., LL.D. 1896; second, enlarged edition, 1912; xv. and 215
-pp., Crown 8vo, cloth. 4s. net. _P. S. King & Son._
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-1896; 242 pp., Crown 8vo, cloth. 5s. _P. S. King & Son._
-
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-February and March, 1896. By the Hon. BERTRAND RUSSELL, B.A., late
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-Democracy and the Woman Question in Germany. By ALYS RUSSELL, B.A. 1896;
-204 pp., Crown 8vo, cloth. 3s. 6d. _P. S. King & Son._
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-HUEVEL, Professor of International Law in the University of Louvain.
-Translated by C. P. TREVELYAN, M.A., Trinity College, Cambridge, and
-edited with Notes, Introduction, Bibliography, and Appendices, by LILIAN
-TOMN (Mrs. Knowles), of Girton College, Cambridge, Research Student at
-the School. 1898; x. and 334 pp., Crown 8vo, cloth. 7s. 6d. _P. S. King
-& Son._
-
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-1897, Trinity College, Dublin. 1899; viii. and 138 pp., Crown 8vo,
-cloth. 2s. 6d. _P. S. King & Son._
-
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-Cambridge. 1899; viii. and 90 pp., with Index and 18 Maps and Diagrams.
-4to, 11 in. by 8¼ in., cloth. 8s. 6d. _Longmans, Green & Co._
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-and edited by the Class in Palæography and Diplomatic, under the
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-15¼ in. by 11¼ in., in green cloth; 2 Copies left. Apply to the Director
-of the London School of Economics.
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-12s. net. _P. S. King & Son._
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-M.A., late Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge, Barrister-at-Law. 1901;
-viii. and 136 pp., Crown 8vo, cloth. 2s. 6d. net. _P. S. King & Son._
-
-=10. A History of Factory Legislation.= By B. L. HUTCHINS and A.
-HARRISON (Mrs. Spencer), B.A., D.Sc. (Econ.), London. With a Preface by
-SIDNEY WEBB, LL.B. 1903; new and revised edition, 1911; xvi. and 298
-pp., Demy 8vo, cloth. 7s. 6d. net. _P. S. King & Son._
-
-=11.The Pipe Roll of the Exchequer of the See of Winchester for the
-Fourth Year of the Episcopate of Peter Des Roches (1207).= Transcribed
-and edited from the original Roll in the possession of the
-Ecclesiastical Commissioners by the Class in Palæography and Diplomatic,
-under the supervision of the Lecturer, HUBERT HALL, F.S.A., of H.M.
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-15s. net. _P. S. King & Son._
-
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-Senior Hulme Exhibitioner, Brasenose College, Oxford. 1903; 414 pp.,
-Demy 8vo, cloth. 7s. 6d. net. _P. S. King & Son._
-
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-Cambridge; Research Student of the London School of Economics and
-Political Science. 1903; 486 pp. Demy 8vo, cloth. 7s. 6d. net. _P. S.
-King & Son._
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-London. 1906; 337 pp., Demy 8vo, cloth. 10s. 6d. net. _Constable & Co._
-
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-LL.B. 1908; xvi. and 470 pp., Demy 8vo, cloth. 7s. 6d. net. _P. S. King
-& Son._
-
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-1909; xxiii. and 336 pp., Demy 8vo, cloth. 10s. 6d. _P. S. King & Son._
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-delivered at the School in November, 1909, by ELLIS T. POWELL, LL.B.,
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-paper. 1s. 6d. net. _P. S. King & Son._
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-Washington, D.Sc. (Econ.), London. xxiv. and 296 pp., Demy 8vo, cloth.
-1910. 8s. 6d. net. _Constable & Co._
-
-=20. National and Local Finance.= By J. WATSON GRICE, D.Sc. (Econ.),
-London. Preface by SIDNEY WEBB, LL.B. 1910; 428 pp., Demy 8vo, cloth.
-12s. net. _P. S. King & Son._
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-SIDNEY WEBB, LL.B. 1911; xiv. and 62 pp., Crown 8vo, cloth. 1s. 6d. net;
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-CLARKE, K.C. 1911; xi. and 333. pp., Demy 8vo, cloth. 10s. 6d. net.
-_Constable & Co._
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-1912; xi. and 410 pp., Demy 8vo, cloth. 10. 6d. net. _Constable & Co._
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-1911; vii. and 135 pp., Demy 8vo, cloth. 5s. net. _Longmans, Green &
-Co._
-
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-LL.D. 1911; xiv. and 188 pp., 2 maps, bibliography, Demy 8vo, cloth.
-10s. 6d. net. _P. S. King & Son._
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-& Co._
-
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-Fisher Unwin._
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-TERRY. 1913; xvi. and 199 pp., Demy 8vo, cloth. 6s. net. _Constable &
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-299 pp., Demy 8vo, cloth. 7s. 6d. net. _P. S. King & Son._
-
-=38. The Export of Capital.= By C. K. HOBSON, M.A., D.Sc. (Econ.),
-London, F.S.S., Shaw Research Student of the London School of Economics
-and Political Science. 1914; xxv. and 264 pp., Demy 8vo, cloth. 7s. 6d.
-net. _Constable & Co._
-
-=39. Industrial Training.= By NORMAN BURRELL DEARLE, M.A., D.Sc.
-(Econ.), London, Fellow of All Souls College, Oxford; Shaw Research
-Student of the London School of Economics and Political Science. 1914;
-610 pp., Demy 8vo, cloth. 10s. 6d. net. _P. S. King & Son._
-
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-“Transports et tarifs” (3rd edn., 1907), by L. R. CHRISTIE, G. LEEDHAM,
-and C. TRAVIS. Edited and arranged by CHARLES TRAVIS, with an
-Introduction by W. M. ACWORTH, M.A. 1914; viii. and 195 pp., Demy 8vo,
-cloth. 3s. 6d. net. _G. Bell & Sons, Ltd._
-
-=41. Advertising: a Study of a Modern Business Power.= By G. W. GOODALL,
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-xviii. and 91 pp., Demy 8vo, cloth. 2s. 6d. net; paper, 1s. 6d. net.
-_Constable & Co._
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-School of Economics and Political Science. 1915; xvi. and 325 pp., Demy
-8vo, cloth. 6s. net. _G. Routledge & Sons._
-
-=43. The Lands of the Scottish Kings in England.= By MARGARET F. MOORE,
-M.A., with an Introduction by P. HUME BROWN, M.A., LL.D., D.D.,
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-in Empire Building.= By RICHARD C. MILLS, LL.M., Melbourne; D.Sc.
-(Econ.), London; with an Introduction by GRAHAM WALLAS, M.A., Professor
-of Political Science in the University of London. 1915; xx., 363 pp.,
-Demy 8vo, cloth. 10s. 6d. net. _Sidgwick & Jackson._
-
-=45. The Philosophy of Nietzsche.= By A. WOLF, M.A., D.Lit., Fellow of
-University College, London; Reader in Logic and Ethics in the University
-of London. 1915; 114 pp., Demy 8vo, cloth, 3s. 6d. net. _Constable &
-Co._
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-=46. English Public Health Administration.= By B. G. BANNINGTON; with a
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-University of London. 1915; xiv., 338 pp., Demy 8vo, cloth. 8s. 6d. net.
-_P. S. King & Son._
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-=47. British Incomes and Property: the application of Official
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-
-=48. Village Government in British India.= By JOHN MATTHAI, D.Sc.
-(Econ.), London; with a Preface by SIDNEY WEBB, L.L.B., Professor of
-Public Administration in the University of London. 1915; xix., 211 pp.,
-Demy 8vo, cloth. 4s. 6d. net. _T. Fisher Unwin._
-
-=49. Welfare Work: Employers’ Experiments for Improving Working
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-London, with a Foreword by the Rt. Hon. D. LLOYD GEORGE, M.P. 1916; xx.,
-363 pp., Demy 8vo, cloth. 7s. 6d. net. _George Bell & Sons._
-
-=50. Rates of Postage.= By A. D. SMITH, D.Sc (Econ.), London. 1917;
-xii., 431 pp., Demy 8vo, cloth. 16s. net. _George Allen & Unwin._
-
-=51. Metaphysical Theory of the State.= By L. T. HOBHOUSE, M.A., Martin
-White Professor of Sociology in the University of London. [In Press.]
-_George Allen & Unwin._
-
-=52. Outlines of Social Philosophy.= By J. S. MACKENZIE, M.A., Professor
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-Press.] _George Allen & Unwin._
-
-
- _Monographs on Sociology._
-
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-in the University of London, G. C. WHEELER, B.A., and M. GINSBERG, B.A.
-1915; 300 pp., Demy 8vo, paper. 2s. 6d. net. _Chapman & Hall._
-
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-HOBHOUSE, M.A. 1915; 153 pp., Demy 8vo, cloth. 5s. net. _George Allen &
-Unwin._
-
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- _Series of Bibliographies by Students of the School._
-
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-and 71 pp., Demy 8vo, cloth, 2s. net; paper, 1s. 6d. net. _P. S. King &
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-
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-F. MOORS, M.A.; with Preface and Appendix by HUBERT HALL, F.S.A. 1912;
-185 pp., Demy 8vo, cloth. 5s. net. _Constable & Co._
-
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-of a similar work compiled by Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Webb in 1906. 1914;
-xviii. and 281 pp., Demy 8vo, cloth. 15s. net. _P. S. King & Son._
-
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-
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-<p style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Working Life of Women in the Seventeenth Century, by Alice Clark</p>
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
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-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: Working Life of Women in the Seventeenth Century</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Alice Clark</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: April 26, 2022 [eBook #67936]</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:left'>Produced by: Fay Dunn, Barry Abrahamsen, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)</p>
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WORKING LIFE OF WOMEN IN THE SEVENTEENTH CENTURY ***</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/cover.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p><span class='small'>The cover image was created by the transcriber and is placed in the public domain.</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c000' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c001'>
- <div><span class='c002'>STUDIES IN ECONOMICS AND POLITICAL SCIENCE</span></div>
- <div class='c000'>Edited by</div>
- <div>The Director of the London School of Economics and Political Science</div>
- <div class='c000'>No. 56 in the series of Monographs by writers connected</div>
- <div>With the London School of Economics and Political Science</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c003' />
-<div>
- <h1 class='c004'><span class='c005'>THE WORKING LIFE OF WOMEN</span><br /> <br />IN THE<br /> <br /><span class='c005'>SEVENTEENTH CENTURY</span></h1>
-</div>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c006' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c006'>
- <div><span class='c007'><span class='sc'>Working Life of Women</span></span></div>
- <div class='c000'><span class='c008'>IN THE</span></div>
- <div class='c000'><span class='c009'><span class='sc'>Seventeenth Century</span></span></div>
- <div class='c006'><span class='c008'>BY</span></div>
- <div class='c000'><span class='c010'>ALICE CLARK</span></div>
- <div class='c000'><i>Shaw Research Student of the London School of Economics and Political Science</i></div>
- <div class='c006'><span class='c005'>LONDON:</span></div>
- <div><span class='c008'>GEORGE ROUTLEDGE &amp; SONS, LTD.</span></div>
- <div><span class='c008'>NEW YORK : E. P. DUTTON &amp; CO.</span></div>
- <div class='c000'>1919</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c006'>
- <div>DEDICATED</div>
- <div>TO MY</div>
- <div>FATHER AND MOTHER</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c006' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c011'>PREFACE</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c012'><span class='sc'>The</span> investigation, whose conclusions are partly described in the
-following treatise, was undertaken with a view to discovering the
-actual circumstances of women’s lives in the Seventeenth Century.</p>
-<p class='c013'>It is perhaps impossible to divest historical enquiry from all
-personal bias, but in this case the bias has simply consisted in a
-conviction that the conditions under which the obscure mass of
-women live and fulfil their duties as human beings, have a vital
-influence upon the destinies of the human race, and that a little
-knowledge of what these conditions have actually been in the past
-will be of more value to the sociologist than many volumes of carefully
-elaborated theory based on abstract ideas.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The theories with which I began this work of investigation as to
-the position occupied by women in a former social organisation have
-been abandoned, and have been replaced by others, which though still
-only held tentatively have at least the merit of resting solely on
-ascertained fact. If these theories should in turn have to be discarded
-when a deeper understanding of history becomes possible,
-yet the picture of human life presented in the following pages will
-not entirely lose its value.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The picture cannot pretend to be complete. The Seventeenth
-Century provides such a wealth of historical material that only a small
-fraction could be examined, and though the selection has been as
-representative as possible, much that is of the greatest importance
-from the point of view from which the enquiry has been made, is not
-yet available. Many records of Gilds, Companies, Quarter
-Sessions and Boroughs which must be studied <i>in extenso</i> before a
-just idea can be formed of women’s position, have up to the present
-been published only in an abbreviated form, if at all.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Another difficulty has been the absence of knowledge regarding
-women’s position in the years preceding the Seventeenth Century.
-This want has to some extent been supplied through the kindness of
-Miss Eileen Power, who has permitted me to use some of the material
-collected by her on this subject, but not yet published.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The Seventeenth Century itself forms a sort of watershed between
-two very widely differing eras in the history of Englishwomen—the
-Elizabethan and the Eighteenth Century. Thus characteristics of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_I'>I</span>both can be studied in the women who move through its varied
-scenes, either in the pages of dramatists or as revealed by domestic
-papers or in more public records.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Only one aspect of their lives has been described in the present
-volume, namely their place in the economic organisation of society.
-This has its own special bearing on the industrial problems of modern
-times; but Life is a whole and cannot safely be separated into
-watertight departments.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The productive activity which is here described was not the work
-of women who were separated from the companionship of married
-life and the joys and responsibilities of motherhood. These aspects
-of their life have not been forgotten, and will, I hope, be dealt with
-in a later volume, along with the whole question of girls’ education.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>How inseparably intertwined are these different threads of life
-will be shown by the fact that apprenticeship and service are left to
-be dealt with in the later volume as links in the educational chain,
-although in many respects they were essential features of women’s
-economic position.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The conception of the sociological importance of past economic
-conditions for women I owe to Olive Schreiner, whose epoch-making
-book “Women and Labour” first drew the attention of many
-workers in the emancipation of women to the difference between
-reality and the commonly received generalisations as to women’s
-productive capacity. From my friend, Dr. K. A. Gerlach came the
-suggestion that I, myself, should attempt to supply further evidence
-along the lines so imaginatively outlined by Mrs. Schreiner. To
-Dr. Lilian Knowles I am indebted for the unwearied patience with
-which she has watched and directed my researches, and to Mrs.
-Bernard Shaw for the generous scholarship with which she assists
-those who wish to devote themselves to the investigation of women’s
-historic past.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I should like here to express the deep sense of gratitude which I
-feel to those who have helped my work in these different ways, and
-to Mrs. George, whose understanding of Seventeenth Century
-conditions has rendered the material she collected for me particularly
-valuable. My thanks are also due to many other friends whose
-sympathy and interest have played a larger part than they know in
-the production of this book.</p>
-<p class='c014'><i>Mill Field,</i></p>
-<p class='c015'><i>Street, Somerset.</i></p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c001' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c011'>CONTENTS</h2>
-</div>
-<table class='table0' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='14%' />
-<col width='71%' />
-<col width='14%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>I.</td>
- <td class='c017'>INTRODUCTORY</td>
- <td class='c018'><a href='#Page_1'>1</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>II.</td>
- <td class='c017'>CAPITALISTS</td>
- <td class='c018'><a href='#Page_14'>14</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>III.</td>
- <td class='c017'>AGRICULTURE</td>
- <td class='c018'><a href='#Page_42'>42</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>IV.</td>
- <td class='c017'>TEXTILES</td>
- <td class='c018'><a href='#Page_93'>93</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>V.</td>
- <td class='c017'>CRAFTS AND TRADES</td>
- <td class='c018'><a href='#Page_150'>150</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>VI.</td>
- <td class='c017'>PROFESSIONS</td>
- <td class='c018'><a href='#Page_236'>236</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>VII.</td>
- <td class='c017'>CONCLUSION</td>
- <td class='c018'><a href='#Page_290'>290</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c017'>LIST OF AUTHORITIES</td>
- <td class='c018'><a href='#Page_309'>309</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c017'>LIST OF WAGES ASSESSMENTS</td>
- <td class='c018'><a href='#Page_320'>320</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c017'>FOOTNOTES</td>
- <td class='c018'><a href='#Page_321'>321</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c017'>INDEX</td>
- <td class='c018'><a href='#Page_322'>322</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c001' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_1'>1</span>
- <h2 class='c011'><span class='sc'>Chapter I</span><br /> <br />INTRODUCTORY</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c019'><span class='sc'>Effect</span> of environment on Women’s development. Possible
-reaction on men’s development—Importance of seventeenth century in
-historic development of English
-women—Influence of economic position—Division of Women’s productive
-powers into Domestic, Industrial, and Professional—Three systems of Industrial
-Organisation—Domestic Industry—Family Industry—Capitalistic Industry
-or Industrialism—Definition of these terms—Historic sequence. Effect of
-Industrial Revolution on Women—in capitalistic class—in agriculture—in
-textile industries—in crafts and other trades. Transference of productive
-industry from married women to unmarried women—with consequent increase
-of economic independence for the latter and its loss for the former. Similar
-evolution in professions shows this was not due wholly to effect of capitalism.</p>
-<p class='c012'><span class='sc'>Hitherto</span> the historian has paid little attention to
-the circumstances of women’s lives, for women have
-been regarded as a static factor in social developments,
-a factor which, remaining itself essentially the same,
-might be expected to exercise a constant and
-unvarying influence on Society.</p>
-<p class='c013'>This assumption has however no basis in fact, for
-the most superficial consideration will show how
-profoundly women can be changed by their environment.
-Not only do the women of the same race
-exhibit great differences from time to time in regard
-to the complex social instincts and virtues, but even
-their more elemental sexual and maternal instincts
-are subject to modification. While in extreme cases
-the sexual impulses are liable to perversion, it sometimes
-happens that the maternal instinct disappears
-altogether, and women neglect or, like a tigress in
-captivity, may even destroy their young.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>These variations deserve the most careful examination,
-for, owing to the indissoluble bond uniting
-the sexes, and the emotional power which women
-exert over men, the character of men’s development
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_2'>2</span>is determined in some sort by the development which
-is achieved by women. In a society where women
-are highly developed men’s characters are insensibly
-modified by association with them, and in a society
-where women are secluded and immature, men lack
-that stimulus which can only be supplied by the other
-sex.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>It may be true, as Goethe said, that the eternal
-feminine leadeth us onwards, but whether this be
-upwards or downwards depends upon the characters
-of individual women.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Owing to the subtle reactions which exist between
-men and women and between the individual and the
-social organism in which he or she lives, accurate and
-detailed knowledge of the historic circumstances
-of human life becomes essential for the sciences of
-Sociology and Psychology. The investigation, of which
-the results are described in the following chapters, was
-undertaken with the object of discovering these
-circumstances as regards women in a limited field
-and during a short period.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The economic field has been chosen because, though
-woman no more than man lives by bread alone, yet
-without bread assuredly she cannot live at all, and
-without an abundant supply of it she cannot worthily
-perform her maternal and spiritual functions. These
-latter are therefore dependent upon the source of her
-food supply. The economic position has a further
-attraction to the student because it rests upon facts
-which can be elucidated with some degree of certainty.
-When these have once been made clear the
-way will have been prepared for the consideration
-of other aspects of women’s lives.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The period under review, namely the seventeenth century,
-forms an important crisis in the historic development
-of Englishwomen. The gulf which separates the
-women of the Restoration period from those of the
-Elizabethan era can be perceived by the most casual
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_3'>3</span>reader of contemporary drama. To the objection
-that the heroines of Shakespeare on the one hand
-and of Congreve and Wycherley on the other are
-creations of the imagination, it must be replied that the
-dramatic poet can only present life as he knows it.
-It was part of Shakespeare’s good fortune to live in a
-period so rich and vivid in its social life as was the reign
-of Elizabeth; and the objective character of his
-portraits can be proved by the study of contemporary
-letters and domestic papers. Similarly the characters
-of the Restoration ladies described in the diary of
-Samuel Pepys and by other writers, confirm the picture
-of Society drawn by Congreve.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>So profound a change occurring in the character of
-women indicates the seventeenth century as a period of
-special interest for social investigation, and consequently
-the economic position has been approached
-less from its direct effect upon the production of
-wealth than from its influence upon women’s development.
-The mechanical aspect has in fact only
-been touched incidentally; an attempt being rather
-made to discover how far the extent of women’s
-productive capacity and the conditions under which it
-was exercised affected their maternal functions and
-reacted upon their social influence both within and
-beyond the limits of the family.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Generalisations are of little service for this purpose.
-Spinoza has said that the objects of God’s knowledge
-are not universals but particulars, and it is in harmony
-with this idea that the following chapters consist
-chiefly of the record of small details in individual lives
-which indicate the actual relation of women to business
-and production, whether on a large scale or a small.
-The pictures given are widely representative, including
-not only the women of the upper classes, but still
-more important, those of the “common people,”
-the husbandmen and tradesmen who formed the
-backbone of the English people, and also those of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_4'>4</span>tragic class of wage-earners, who, though comparatively
-few in numbers, already constituted a serious problem
-in the seventeenth century.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>In the course of the investigation, comparison is
-frequently made with the economic position of mediæval
-women on the one hand, and with women’s
-position under modern industrial conditions, on the
-other. It must be admitted, however, that comparisons
-with the middle ages rest chiefly on conjecture.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Owing to the greater complexity of a woman’s life
-her productive capacity must be classified on different
-lines from those which are generally followed in
-dealing with the economic life of men.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>For the purposes of this essay, the highest, most
-intense forms to which women’s productive energy
-is directed have been excluded; that is to say, the
-spiritual creation of the home and the physical creation
-of the child. Though essentially productive, such
-achievements of creative power transcend the limitations
-of economics and one instinctively feels
-that there would be something almost degrading
-in any attempt to weigh them in the balance with
-productions that are bought and sold in the market or
-even with professional services. Nevertheless it must
-never be forgotten that the productive energy which
-is described in the ensuing chapters was in no sense
-alternative to the exercise of these higher forms of
-creative power but was employed simultaneously with
-them. It may be suspected that the influences of
-home life were stronger in the social life of the
-seventeenth century than they are in modern England,
-and certainly the birth-rate was much higher in every
-class of the community except perhaps the very poorest.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>But, leaving these two forms of creative power
-aside, there remains another special factor complicating
-women’s economic position, namely, the extent of her
-production for domestic purposes—as opposed to
-industrial and professional purposes. The domestic
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_5'>5</span>category includes all goods and services, either material
-or spiritual, which are produced solely for the benefit
-of the family, while the industrial and professional
-are those which are produced either for sale or exchange.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>In modern life the majority of Englishwomen devote
-the greater part of their lives to domestic occupations,
-while men are freed from domestic occupations of
-any sort, being generally engaged in industrial or
-professional pursuits and spending their leisure over
-public services or personal pleasure and amusement.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Under modern conditions the ordinary domestic
-occupations of Englishwomen consist in tending babies
-and young children, either as mothers or servants, in
-preparing household meals, and in keeping the house
-clean, while laundry work, preserving fruit, and the
-making of children’s clothes are still often included in
-the domestic category. In the seventeenth century it
-embraced a much wider range of production; for
-brewing, dairy-work, the care of poultry and pigs, the
-production of vegetables and fruit, spinning flax and
-wool, nursing and doctoring, all formed part of domestic
-industry. Therefore the part which women played
-in industrial and professional life was in addition to a
-much greater productive activity in the domestic sphere
-than is required of them under modern conditions.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>On the other hand it may be urged that, if women
-were upon the whole more actively engaged in industrial
-work during the seventeenth century than they
-were in the first decade of the twentieth century,
-men were much more occupied with domestic affairs
-then than they are now. Men in all classes gave time
-and care to the education of their children, and the
-young unmarried men who generally occupied positions
-as apprentices and servants were partly employed
-over domestic work. Therefore, though now it is
-taken for granted that domestic work will be done by
-women, a considerable proportion of it in former days
-fell to the share of men.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_6'>6</span>These circumstances have led to a different use of
-terms in this essay from that which has generally been
-adopted; a difference rendered necessary from the
-fact that other writers on industrial evolution have
-considered it only from the man’s point of view, whereas
-this investigation is concerned primarily with its
-effect upon the position of women.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>To facilitate the enquiry, organisation for production
-is divided into three types:</p>
-<div class='lg-container-l c020'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>(a) Domestic Industry.</div>
- <div class='line'>(b) Family Industry.</div>
- <div class='line'>(c) Capitalistic Industry, or Industrialism.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>No hard-and-fast line exists in practice between
-these three systems, which merge imperceptibly into
-one another. In the seventeenth century all three
-existed side by side, often obtaining at the same time
-in the same industries, but the underlying principles
-are quite distinct and may be defined as follows:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>(a) <i>Domestic Industry</i> is the form of production
-in which the goods produced are for the exclusive use
-of the family and are not therefore subject to an
-exchange or money value.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>(b) <i>Family Industry</i> is the form in which the
-family becomes the unit for the production of goods
-to be sold or exchanged.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The family consisted of father, mother, children,
-household servants and apprentices; the apprentices
-and servants being children and young people
-of both sexes who earned their keep and in the
-latter case a nominal wage, but who did not expect to
-remain permanently as wage-earners, hoping on the
-contrary in due course to marry and set up in business
-on their own account. The profits of family industry
-belonged to the family and not to individual members
-of it. During his lifetime they were vested in the
-father who was regarded as the head of the family;
-he was expected to provide from them marriage
-portions for his children as they reached maturity,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_7'>7</span>and on his death the mother succeeded to his
-position as head of the family, his right of bestowal
-by will being strictly limited by custom and public
-opinion.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Two features are the main characteristics of Family
-Industry in its perfect form;—first, the unity of
-capital and labour, for the family, whether that of a
-farmer or tradesman, owned stock and tools and
-themselves contributed the labour: second, the situation
-of the workshop within the precincts of the home.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>These two conditions were rarely completely fulfilled
-in the seventeenth century, for the richer
-farmers and tradesmen often employed permanent
-wage-earners in addition to the members of their
-family, and in other cases craftsmen no longer owned
-their stock, but made goods to the order of the capitalist
-who supplied them with the necessary material.
-Nevertheless, the character of Family Industry was
-retained as long as father, mother, and children worked
-together, and the money earned was regarded as
-belonging to the family, not to the individual members
-of it.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>From the point of view of the economic position
-of women a system can be classed as family industry
-while the father works at home, but when he leaves
-home to work on the capitalist’s premises the last
-vestige of family industry disappears and industrialism
-takes its place.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>(c) <i>Capitalistic Industry</i>, or <i>Industrialism</i>, is the
-system by which production is controlled by the
-owners of capital, and the labourers or producers, men,
-women and children receive individual wages.<a id='r1' /><a href='#f1' class='c021'><sup>[1]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_8'>8</span>Domestic and family industry existed side by side
-during the middle ages; for example, brewing, baking,
-spinning, cheese and butter making were conducted
-both as domestic arts and for industrial purposes.
-Both were gradually supplanted by capitalistic
-industry, the germ of which was apparently introduced
-about the thirteenth century, and gradually
-developed strength for a more rapid advance in the
-seventeenth century.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>While the development of capitalistic industry
-will always be one of the most interesting subjects for
-the student of political economy, its effect upon the
-position and capacity of women becomes of paramount
-importance to the sociologist.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>This effect must be considered from three stand-points:—</p>
-
-<p class='c022'>(1) Does the capitalistic organisation of industry
-increase or diminish women’s productive capacity?</p>
-
-<p class='c022'>(2) Does it make them more or less successful in
-their special function of motherhood?</p>
-
-<p class='c022'>(3) Does it strengthen or weaken their influence
-over morals and their position in the general
-organisation of human society?</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>These three questions were not asked by the men
-who were actors in the Industrial Revolution, and
-apparently their importance has hitherto escaped the
-notice of those who have written chapters of its
-history.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Mankind, lulled by its faith in the “eternal feminine”
-has reposed in the belief that women remain
-the same, however completely their environment may
-alter, and having once named a place “the home”
-thinks it makes no difference whether it consists of a
-workshop or a boudoir. But the effect of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_9'>9</span>Industrial Revolution on home life, and through
-that upon the development and characters of
-women and upon their productive capacity, deeply
-concerns the sociologist, for the increased productive
-capacity of mankind may be dearly bought by the
-disintegration of social organisation and a lowering
-of women’s capacity for motherhood.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The succeeding chapters will show how the spread
-of capitalism affected the productive capacity of
-women:—</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>(1) In the capitalist class where the energy and
-hardiness of Elizabethan ladies gave way before
-the idleness and pleasure which characterised the
-Restoration period.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>(2) In agriculture, where the wives of the richer
-yeomen were withdrawing from farm work and where
-there already existed a considerable number of labourers
-dependent entirely on wages, whose wives having no
-gardens or pastures were unable to supply the families’
-food according to old custom. The wages of such
-women were too irregular and too low to maintain
-them and their children in a state of efficiency, and
-through semi-starvation their productive powers and
-their capacity for motherhood were greatly reduced.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>(3) In the Textile Trades where the demand
-for thread and yarn which could only be produced
-by women and children was expanding.
-The convenience of spinning as an employment
-for odd minutes and the mechanical character of its
-movements which made no great tax on eye or brain,
-rendered it the most adaptable of all domestic arts
-to the necessities of the mother. Spinning became
-the chief resource for the married women who
-were losing their hold on other industries, but its
-return in money value was too low to render them
-independent of other means of support. There is
-little evidence to suggest that women shared in
-the capitalistic enterprises of the clothiers during
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_10'>10</span>this period, and they had lost their earlier position
-as monopolists of the silk trade.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>(4) In other crafts and trades where a tendency
-can be traced for women to withdraw from business
-as this developed on capitalistic lines. The history
-of the gilds shows a progressive weakening of their
-positions in these associations, though the corporations
-of the seventeenth century still regarded the wife as
-her husband’s partner. In these corporations the
-effect of capitalism on the industrial position of the
-wage-earner’s wife becomes visible.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Under family industry the wife of every master
-craftsman became free of his gild and could share his
-work. But as the crafts became capitalised many
-journeymen never qualified as masters, remaining in
-the outer courts of the companies all their lives, and
-actually forming separate organisations to protect their
-interests against their masters and to secure a privileged
-position for themselves by restricting the number of
-apprentices. As the journeymen worked on their
-masters’ premises it naturally followed that their
-wives were not associated with them in their work,
-and that apprenticeship became the only entrance
-to their trade.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Though no written rules existed confining apprenticeship
-to the male sex, girls were seldom if ever
-admitted as apprentices in the gild trades, and therefore
-women were excluded from the ranks of journeymen.
-As the journeyman’s wife could not work
-at her husband’s trade, she must, if need be, find
-employment for herself as an individual. In some
-cases the journeyman’s organisations were powerful
-enough to keep wages on a level which sufficed for
-the maintenance of their families; then the wife
-became completely dependent on her husband, sinking
-to the position of his unpaid domestic servant.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>In the Retail and Provision Trades which in some
-respects were peculiarly favourable for women, they
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_11'>11</span>experienced many difficulties owing to the restrictive
-rules of companies and corporations; but where a man
-was engaged in this class of business, his wife shared
-his labours, and on his death generally retained the
-direction of the business as his widow.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The history of brewing is one of the most curious
-examples of the effect of capitalism on women’s position
-in industry, for as the term “brewster” shows,
-originally it was a woman’s trade but with the development
-of Capitalism it passed completely from the
-hands of women to those of men.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The tendency of capitalism to lessen the relative
-productive capacity of women might be overlooked
-if our understanding of the process was limited to the
-changes which had actually taken place by the end of
-the seventeenth century. No doubt the majority of
-the population at that time was still living under
-conditions governed by the traditions and habits formed
-during the period of Family and Domestic Industry.
-But the contrast which the life described in the following
-chapters presents to the life of women under
-modern conditions will be evident even to readers
-who have not closely followed the later historical
-developments of Capitalism.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>In estimating the influence of economic changes
-on the position of women it must be remembered that
-Capitalism has not merely replaced Family Industry
-but has been equally destructive of Domestic Industry.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>One unexpected effect has been the reversal of the
-parts which married and unmarried women play in
-productive enterprise. In the earlier stages of
-economic evolution that which we now call domestic
-work, <i>viz.</i>, cooking, cleaning, mending, tending of
-children, etc., was performed by unmarried girls under
-the direction of the housewife, who was thus enabled
-to take an important position in the family industry.
-Under modern conditions this domestic work falls
-upon the mothers, who remain at home while the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_12'>12</span>unmarried girls go out to take their place in industrial
-or professional life. The young girls in modern life
-have secured a position of economic independence,
-while the mothers remain in a state of dependence
-and subordination—an order of things which would
-have greatly astonished our ancestors.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>In the seventeenth century the idea is seldom encountered
-that a man supports his wife; husband and
-wife were then mutually dependent and together
-supported their children. At the back of people’s
-minds an instinctive feeling prevailed that the father
-furnished rent, shelter, and protection while the mother
-provided food; an instinct surviving from a remote
-past when the villein owed to his lord the labour of
-three or four days per week throughout the year in
-addition to the boon work at harvest or any other time
-when labour was most wanted for his own crops; surely
-then it was largely the labour of the mother and the
-children which won the family’s food from the
-yard-land.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The reality of the change which has been effected
-in the position of wife and mother is shown by a letter
-to <i>The Gentleman’s Magazine</i> in 1834 criticising proposed
-alterations in the Poor Law. The writer defends
-the system then in use of giving allowances from the
-rates to labourers according to the number of their
-children. He says that the people who animadvert
-on the allowance system “never observe the cause
-from which it proceeds. There are, we will say,
-twenty able single labourers in a parish; twenty
-equally able married, with large families. One class
-wants 12<i>s.</i> a week, one 20<i>s.</i> The farmer, who has his
-choice of course takes the single.” The allowance
-system equalises the position of married and single.
-Formerly this inequality did not exist “<i>because it was
-of no importance to the farmer whether he employed the
-single or married labourer, inasmuch as the labourer’s
-wife and family could provide for themselves</i>. They are
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_13'>13</span>now dependent on the man’s labour, or nearly so;
-except in particular cases, as when women go out to
-wash, to nurse, or take in needlework, and so on. The
-machinery and manufactures have destroyed cottage
-labour—spinning, the only resource formerly of the
-female poor, who thus were earning their bread at home,
-while their fathers and husbands were earning theirs
-abroad.... In agricultural parishes the men, the
-labourers, are not too numerous or more than are
-wanted; but the families hang as a dead weight
-upon the rates for want of employment. The girls
-are now not brought up to <i>spin</i>—none of them know
-the art. They all handle when required, the hoe, and
-their business is weeding. Our partial remedy for
-this great and growing evil is allotments of land,
-which are to afford the occupation that the distaff
-formerly did; and so the wife and daughters can be
-cultivating small portions of ground and raising potatoes
-and esculents, etc., the while the labourer is at
-his work.”<a id='r2' /><a href='#f2' class='c021'><sup>[2]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>These far-reaching changes coincided with the
-triumph of capitalistic organisation but they may not
-have been a necessary consequence of that triumph.
-They may have arisen from some deep-lying cause,
-some tendency in human evolution which was merely
-hastened by the economic cataclysm.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The fact that the evolution of women’s position in
-the professions followed a course closely resembling
-that which was taking place in industry suggests the
-existence of an ultimate cause influencing the direction
-in each case.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c001' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_14'>14</span>
- <h2 class='c011'><span class='sc'>Chapter II</span><br /> <br />CAPITALISTS</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c019'>Term includes aristocracy and <i>nouveau riche</i>. Tendency of these two classes to
-approximate in manners—Activity of aristocratic women with affairs of household,
-estate and nation—Zeal for patents and monopolies—Money lenders—Shipping
-trade—Contractors—Joan Dant—Dorothy Petty—Association of
-wives in husbands’ businesses—Decrease of women’s business activity in upper
-classes—Contrast of Dutch women—Growing idleness of gentlewomen.</p>
-<p class='c023'><span class='sc'>Perhaps</span> it is impossible to say what exactly constitutes
-a capitalist, and no attempt will be made to define
-the term, which is used here to include the aristocracy
-who had long been accustomed to the control of
-wealth, and also those families whose wealth had been
-newly acquired through trade or commerce. The
-second group conforms more nearly to the ideas
-generally understood by the term capitalist; but
-in English society the two groups are closely related.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The first group naturally represents the older
-traditional relation of women to affairs in the upper
-classes, while the second responded more quickly to the
-new spirit which was being manifested in English
-life. No rigid line of demarcation existed between
-them, because while the younger sons of the gentry
-engaged in trade, the daughters of wealthy tradesmen
-were eagerly sought as brides by an impoverished
-aristocracy. Therefore the manners and customs of
-the two groups gradually approximated to each other.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>At the beginning of the seventeenth century it was
-usual for the women of the aristocracy to be very busy
-with affairs—affairs which concerned their household,
-their estates and even the Government.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Thus Lady Barrymore writes she is “a cuntry
-lady living in Ireland and convercing with none but
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_15'>15</span>masons and carpendors, for I am now finishing a
-house, so that if my govenour [Sir Edmund Verney]
-please to build a new house, that may be well seated
-and have a good prospect, I will give him my best
-advice gratis.”<a id='r3' /><a href='#f3' class='c021'><sup>[3]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Lady Gardiner’s husband apologises for her not
-writing personally to Sir Ralph Verney, she “being
-almost melted with the double heat of the weather and
-her hotter employment, because the fruit is suddenly
-ripe and she is so busy preserving.”<a id='r4' /><a href='#f4' class='c021'><sup>[4]</sup></a> Their household
-consisted of thirty persons.</p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Among the nobility the management of the estate
-was often left for months in the wife’s care while the
-husband was detained at Court for business or pleasure.
-It was during her husband’s absence that Brilliana,
-Lady Harley defended Brampton Castle from an
-attack by the Royalist forces who laid siege to it for
-six weeks, when her defence became famous for its
-determination and success. Her difficulties in estate
-management are described in letters to her son:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“You know how your fathers biusnes is neglected;
-and alas! it is not speaking will sarue turne, wheare
-theare is not abilltise to doo other ways; thearefore
-I could wisch, that your father had one of more
-vnderstanding to intrust, to looke to, if his rents are
-not payed, and I thinke it will be so. I could desire,
-if your father thought well of it, that Mr. Tomas
-Moore weare intrusted with it; he knows your fathers
-estate, and is an honnest man, and not giuen to great
-expences, and thearefore I thinke he would goo the
-most frugally way. I knowe it would be some charges
-to haue him and his wife in the howes; but I thinke
-it would quite the chargess. I should be loth to
-haue a stranger, nowe your father is away.”<a id='r5' /><a href='#f5' class='c021'><sup>[5]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_16'>16</span>“I loos the comfort of your fathers company, and
-am in but littell safety, but that my trust is in God;
-and what is doun to your fathers estate pleases him
-not, so that I wisch meselfe, with all my hart, at
-Loundoun, and then your father might be a wittnes
-of what is spent; but if your father thinke it beest
-for me to be in the cuntry, I am every well pleased
-with what he shall thinke best.”<a id='r6' /><a href='#f6' class='c021'><sup>[6]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>One gathers from these letters that in spite of her
-devotion and ability and his constant absence Sir E.
-Harley never gave his wife full control of the estate,
-and was always more ready to censure than to praise
-her arrangements; but other men who were immersed
-in public matters thankfully placed the whole burthen
-of family affairs in the capable hands of their wives.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Lady Murray wrote of her father, Sir George Baillie,
-“He had no ambition but to be free of debt; yet so
-great trust and confidence did he put in my mother,
-and so absolutely free of all jealousy and suspicion, that
-he left the management of his affairs entirely to her,
-without scarce asking a question about them; except
-sometimes would say to her, ‘Is my debt paid yet?’
-though often did she apply to him for direction and
-advice; since he knew enough of the law for the
-management of his own affairs, when he would take
-the time or trouble or to prevent his being imposed
-upon by others.”<a id='r7' /><a href='#f7' class='c021'><sup>[7]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Mrs. Alice Thornton wrote of her mother:</p>
-<p class='c024'>“Nor was she awanting to make a fare greatter improvement
-[than her dowery of £2000] of my father’s
-estate through her wise and prudential government of
-his family, and by her care was a meanes to give opportunity
-of increasing his patrimony.”<a id='r8' /><a href='#f8' class='c021'><sup>[8]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_17'>17</span>In addition to the Household Accounts those of the
-whole of Judge Fell’s estate at Swarthmore, Lancashire,
-were kept by his daughter Sarah. The following
-entries show that the family affairs included a farm,
-a forge, mines, some interest in shipping and something
-of the nature of a Bank.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>July 11, 1676, is entered: “To mᵒ Recᵈ. of Tho:
-Greaves wife wᶜʰ. I am to returne to London foʳ her,
-&amp; is to bee pᵈ, to her sonn Jⁿᵒ. ffellꝑ Waltʳ. miers in
-London, 001. 00. 00.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Jan., 14, 1676-7, by money lent Wiƚƚm Wilson
-our forge Clarke till hee gett money in for Ireon
-sold 10. 0. 0.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Aug. ye 9º 1677 by mᵒ “in expence at adgarley when
-wee went to chuse oare to send father 000. 00. 04.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Other payments are entered for horses to “lead
-oare.”<a id='r9' /><a href='#f9' class='c021'><sup>[9]</sup></a> &amp;c., &amp;c.</p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>In addition to those of her family Sarah Fell kept
-the accounts for the local “Monthly Meeting” of the
-Society of Friends, making the payments on its behalf
-to various poor Friends.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>One of the sisters after her marriage embarked upon
-speculations in salt; of her, another sister, Margaret
-Rous, writes to their mother: “She kept me in the
-dark and had not you wrote me them few words about
-her I had not known she had been so bad. But I had
-a fear before how she would prove if I should meddle of
-her, and since I know her mind wrote to her, being she
-was so wickedly bent and resolved in her mind, I
-would not meddle of her but leave her to her husbands
-relations, and her salt concerns, since which I have
-heard nothing from her. But I understand by others
-she is still in the salt business. I know not what it
-will benefit her but she spends her time about it. I
-have left her at present.”<a id='r10' /><a href='#f10' class='c021'><sup>[10]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_18'>18</span>A granddaughter of Oliver Cromwell, the wife of
-Thos. Bendish, was also interested in the salt business,
-having property in salt works at Yarmouth in the management
-of which she was actively concerned. It was
-said of her that “Her courage and presence of mind
-were remarkable in one of her sex, ... she
-would sometimes, after a hard day of drudgery go to the
-assembly at Yarmouth, and appear one of the most
-brilliant there.”<a id='r11' /><a href='#f11' class='c021'><sup>[11]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Initiative and enterprise were shown by Lady
-Falkland during her husband’s term of office in
-Ireland whither she accompanied him.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“The desire of the benefit and commodity of that
-nation set her upon a great design: it was to bring
-up the use of all trades in that country, which is fain to
-be beholden to others for the smallest commodities;
-to this end she procured some of each kind to come from
-those other places where those trades are exercised,
-as several sorts of linen and woollen weavers, dyers, all
-sorts of spinners and knitters, hatters, lace-makers,
-and many other trades at the very beginning.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>After a description of her methods for instruction
-in these arts the biographer continues: “She brought
-it to that pass that they there made broad-cloth so
-fine ... that her Lord being Deputy wore it.
-Yet it came to nothing; which she imputed to a
-judgment of God on her, because the overseers made
-all those poor children go to church; ... and that
-therefore her business did not succeed. But others
-thought it rather that she was better at contriving than
-executing, and that too many things were undertaken
-at the very first; and that she was fain (having little
-choice) to employ either those that had little skill in the
-matters they dealt in, or less honesty; and so she was
-extremely cozened ... but chiefly the ill order
-she took for paying money in this ... having the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_19'>19</span>worst memory in such things in the world ...
-and never keeping any account of what she did, she
-was most subject to pay the same things often (as
-she hath had it confessed to her by some that they have
-in a small matter made her pay them the same thing
-five times in five days).”<a id='r12' /><a href='#f12' class='c021'><sup>[12]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Lady Falkland received small sympathy from her
-husband in her dealings with affairs—and though her
-methods may have been exasperating, their unfortunate
-differences were not wholly due to her temperament.
-He had married her for her fortune and when this
-was settled on their son and not placed in his control,
-his disappointment was so great that his affections
-were alienated from her.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Of her efforts to further his interests Lord Falkland
-wrote to Lord Conway:</p>
-
-<p class='c025'>“My very good Lord,</p>
-<p class='c026'>By all my wife’s letters I understand my obligations
-to your Lordship to be very many; and she
-takes upon her to have received so manifold and noble
-demonstrations of your favour to herself, that she
-begins to conceive herself some able body in court,
-by your countenance to do me courtesies, if she had the
-wit as she hath the will. She makes it appear she hath
-done me some good offices in removing some infusions
-which my great adversary here (Loftus) hath made
-unto you ... it was high time; for many evil
-consequences of the contrary have befallen me since
-that infusion was first made, which I fear will not be
-removed in haste; and must thank her much for
-her careful pains in it, though it was but an act of duty
-in her to see me righted when she knew me wronged
-... and beseech your Lordship still to continue that
-favour to us both;—to her, as well in giving her
-good counsel as good countenance within a new world
-and court, at such a distance from her husband a poor
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_20'>20</span>weak woman stands in the greatest need of to dispatch
-her suits,” ... etc., etc.</p>
-<p class='c027'>“Dublyn Castle this 26th of July, 1625.”<a id='r13' /><a href='#f13' class='c021'><sup>[13]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn c028'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c029'>Later he continues in the same strain:</p>
-
-<p class='c025'>“... I am glad your Lordship doth approve my
-wife’s good affection to her husband, which was a point I
-never doubted, but for her abilities in agency of
-affairs, as I was never taken with opinion of them, so
-I was never desirous to employ them if she had them,
-for I conceive women to be no fit solicitors of state
-affairs for though it sometimes happen that they have
-good wits, it then commonly falls out that they have
-over-busy natures withal. For my part I should take
-much more comfort to hear that she were quietly
-retired to her mother’s in the country, than that she
-had obtained a great suit in the court.”<a id='r14' /><a href='#f14' class='c021'><sup>[14]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn c028'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c029'>The sentiments expressed by Lord Falkland were
-not characteristic of his time, when husbands were
-generally thankful to avail themselves of their wives’
-services in such matters.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>While Sir Ralph Verney was exiled in France, he
-proposed that his wife should return to England to
-attend to some urgent business. His friend, Dr.
-Denton replied to the suggestion:</p>
-
-<p class='c025'>“... not to touch upon inconveniences of yʳ
-comminge, women were never soe usefull as now, and
-though yᵘ should be my agent and sollicitour of all
-the men I knowe (and therefore much more to be
-preferred in yʳ own cause) yett I am confident if yᵘ
-were here, yᵘ would doe as our sages doe, instruct yʳ
-wife, and leave her to act it wᵗʰ committees, their
-sexe entitles them to many priviledges and we find the
-comfort of them more now than ever.”<a id='r15' /><a href='#f15' class='c021'><sup>[15]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn c028'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c029'><span class='pageno' id='Page_21'>21</span>There are innumerable accounts in contemporary
-letters and papers of the brave and often successful
-efforts of women to stem the flood of misfortune which
-threatened ruin to their families.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Katharine Lady Bland treated with Captain Hotham
-in 1642 on behalf of Lord Savile “and agreed with
-him for the preservation of my lords estate and protection
-of his person for £1,000,” £320 of which had
-already been taken “from Lord Savile’s trunk at
-Kirkstall Abbey ... and the Captain ...
-promised to procure a protection from the parliament
-... for his lordships person and estate.”<a id='r16' /><a href='#f16' class='c021'><sup>[16]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Lady Mary Heveningham, through her efforts
-restored the estate to the family after her husband
-had been convicted of high treason at the
-Restoration.<a id='r17' /><a href='#f17' class='c021'><sup>[17]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Of Mrs. Muriel Lyttelton, the daughter of Lord
-Chancellor Bromley, it was said that she “may be called
-the second founder of the family, as she begged the
-estate of King James when it was forfeited and lived
-a pattern of a good wife, affectionate widow, and careful
-parent for thirty years, with the utmost prudence
-and economy at Hagley to retrieve the estate and pay
-off the debts; the education of her children in virtue
-and the protestant religion being her principal employ.
-Her husband, Mr. John Lyttelton, a zealous papist,
-was condemned, and his estates forfeited, for being
-concern’d in Essex’s plot.”<a id='r18' /><a href='#f18' class='c021'><sup>[18]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Charles Parker confessed, “Certainly I had starved
-had I not left all to my wife to manage, who gets
-something by living there and haunting some of her
-kindred and what wayes I know not but I am sure
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_22'>22</span>such as noe way entangle me in conscience or loyalty
-nor hinder me from serving the King.”<a id='r19' /><a href='#f19' class='c021'><sup>[19]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Lady Fanshawe said her husband “thought it
-conveniente to send me into England again, ...
-there to try what sums I could raise, both for his
-subsistence abroad and mine at home.... I
-... embarked myself in a hoy for Dover, with
-Mrs. Waller, and my sister Margaret Harrison and my
-little girl Nan, ... I had ...
-the good fortune as I then thought it, to sell £300 a
-year to him that is now Judge Archer in Essex, for
-which he gave me £4,000 which at that time I thought
-a vast sum; ... five hundred pounds I
-carried to my husband, the rest I left in my father’s
-agent’s hands to be returned as we needed it.”<a id='r20' /><a href='#f20' class='c021'><sup>[20]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The Marquis of Ormonde wrote: “I have written
-2 seuerall ways of late to my wife about our domestick
-affaires, which are in great disorder betweext the want
-of meanes to keepe my sonnes abroad and the danger
-of leaueing them at home.... I thank you for
-your continued care of my children. I haue written
-twice to my wife to the effect you speake of. I pray
-God shee be able to put it in execution either way.”<a id='r21' /><a href='#f21' class='c021'><sup>[21]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>This letter does not breathe that spirit of confidence
-in the wife’s ability which was shown in some of the
-others and it happened sometimes that the wife was
-either overwhelmed by procedure beyond her understanding,
-or at least sought for special consideration
-on the plea of her sex’s weakness and ignorance.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Sarah, wife of Henry Burton, gives an account of
-Burton’s trial in the Star Chamber, his sentence and
-punishment (fine, pillory, imprisonment for life)
-and his subsequent transportation to Guernsey, “where
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_23'>23</span>he now is but by what order your petitioner knoweth
-not and is kept in strict durance of exile and imprisonment,
-and utterly denied the society of your petitioner
-contrary to the liberties and privileges of
-this kingdome ... debarred of the accesse of
-friends, the use of pen, inck and paper and other
-means to make knowne his just complaintes,” and
-she petitions the House of Commons “to take her
-distressed condition into your serious consideracion
-and because your peticioner is a woman not knowing
-how to prosecute nor manage so great and weighty
-busines” begs that Burton may be sent over to
-prosecute his just complaint.<a id='r22' /><a href='#f22' class='c021'><sup>[22]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Similarly, Bastwick’s wife pleads that he is so closely
-imprisoned in the Isle of Scilly “that your petitioner
-is not permitted to have any access unto him, so that
-for this 3 yeares and upward hir husband hath
-been exiled from hir, and she in all this time could not
-obtayne leave, although she hath earnestly sued for
-it, neither to live with him nor so much as to see him,
-and whereas your peticioner hath many smale children
-depending uppon hir for there mauntenance, and she
-of hir selfe being every way unable to provide for
-them, she being thus separated from her deare and
-loving husband and hir tender babes from there
-carefull father (they are in) great straights want and
-miserie,” and she begs that her husband may be sent
-to England, “your Petitioner being a woman no way
-able to follow nor manage so great and weighty a
-cause....”<a id='r23' /><a href='#f23' class='c021'><sup>[23]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The above efforts were all made in defence of
-family estates, but at this time women were also
-concerned with the affairs of the nation, in which they
-took an active part.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Mrs. Hutchinson describes how “When the Parliament
-sat again, the colonel [Hutchinson] sent up his
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_24'>24</span>wife to solicit his business in the house, that the Lord
-Lexington’s bill might not pass the lower house ...
-she notwithstanding many other discouragements
-waited upon the business every day, when her
-adversaries as diligently solicited against her” a
-friend told her how “the laste statemen’s wives came
-and offered them all the information they had gathered
-from their husbands, and how she could not but know
-more than any of them; and if yet she would impart
-anything that might show her gratitude, she might
-redeem her family from ruin, ... but she discerned
-his drift and scorned to become an informer,
-and made him believe she was ignorant, though she
-could have enlightened him in the very thing he
-sought for; which they are now never likely to know
-much of, it being locked up in the grave.”<a id='r24' /><a href='#f24' class='c021'><sup>[24]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Herbert Morley wrote to Sir William Campion in
-1645:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“I could impart more, but letters are subject to
-miscarriage, therefore I reserve myself to a more fit
-opportunity.... If a conference might be had,
-I conceive it would be most for the satisfaction of us
-both, to prevent of any possible hazard of your
-person. If you please to let your lady meet me
-at Watford ... or come hither, I will procure
-her a pass.”<a id='r25' /><a href='#f25' class='c021'><sup>[25]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Sir William replied: “For any business you have to
-impart to me, I have that confidence in you, by reason
-of our former acquaintance, that I should not make
-any scruple to send my wife to the places mentioned;
-but the truth is, she is at present soe neare her time
-for lying downe, for she expects to be brought to bed
-within less than fourteen days, that she is altogether
-unfit to take soe long a journey....”<a id='r26' /><a href='#f26' class='c021'><sup>[26]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_25'>25</span>A book might be wholly filled with a story of the
-part taken by women in the political and religious
-struggles of this period. They were also active among
-the crowd who perpetually beseiged the Court for
-grants of wardships and monopolies or patents.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Ann Wallwyn writes to Salisbury soliciting the
-wardship of the son of James Tomkins who is likely to
-die.<a id='r27' /><a href='#f27' class='c021'><sup>[27]</sup></a> The petition of Dame Anne Wigmore, widow of
-Sir Richard Wigmore, states that she has found out a
-suit which will rectify many abuses, bring in a yearly
-revenue to the Crown and give satisfaction to the
-Petitioner for the great losses of herself and her
-husband. Details follow for a scheme for a corporation
-of carriers and others.<a id='r28' /><a href='#f28' class='c021'><sup>[28]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Dorothy Selkane reminds Salisbury that a patent
-has been promised her for the digging of coals upon
-a royal manor. The men who manage the business
-for her are content to undertake all charges for the
-discovery of the coal and to compensate the tenants
-of the manor according to impartial arbitrators. She
-begs Salisbury that as she has been promised a patent
-the matter may be brought to a final conclusion that
-she may not be forced to trouble him further
-“having alredie bestowed a yeres solicitinge therein.”<a id='r29' /><a href='#f29' class='c021'><sup>[29]</sup></a>
-In 1610 the same lady writes again:—“I have bene
-at gte toyle and charges this yere and a halfe past as
-also have bene put to extraordinarie sollicitacion
-manie and sundry waies for the Dispatching of my
-suite ...” and begs that the grant may pass
-without delay.<a id='r30' /><a href='#f30' class='c021'><sup>[30]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>A grant was made in 1614 to Anne, Roger and
-James Wright of a licence to keep a tennis court at
-St. Edmund’s Bury, co. Suffolk, for life.<a id='r31' /><a href='#f31' class='c021'><sup>[31]</sup></a> Bessy
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_26'>26</span>Welling, servant to the late Prince Henry, petitioned
-for the erecting of an office for enrolling the Apprentices
-of Westminster, etc. As this was not granted,
-she therefore begs for a lease of some concealed lands
-[manors for which no rent has been paid for a hundred
-years] for sixty-one years. The Petitioner hopes to
-recover them for the King at her own charges.<a id='r32' /><a href='#f32' class='c021'><sup>[32]</sup></a>
-Lady Roxburgh craves a licence to assay all gold
-and silver wire “finished at the bar” before it is
-worked, showing that it is no infringement on the
-Earl of Holland’s grant which is for assaying and
-sealing gold and silver after it is made. This, it is
-pointed out, will be a means for His Majesty to pay off
-the debt he owes to Lady Roxburgh which otherwise
-must be paid some other way.<a id='r33' /><a href='#f33' class='c021'><sup>[33]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>A petition from Katharine Elliot “wett nurse to the
-Duke of Yorke” shows that there is a moor waste or
-common in Somersetshire called West Sedge Moor
-which appears to be the King’s but has been appropriated
-and encroached upon by bordering commoners.
-She begs for a grant of it for sixty years; as an inducement
-the Petitioner offers to recover it at her own
-costs and charges and to pay a rent of one shilling
-per acre, the King never previously having received
-benefit therefrom.<a id='r34' /><a href='#f34' class='c021'><sup>[34]</sup></a> The reference by Windebank
-notes that the king is willing to gratify the Petitioner.
-Another petition was received from this same lady
-declaring that “Divers persons being of no corporation
-prefers the trade of buying and selling silk stockings
-and silk waistcoats as well knit as woven uttering
-the Spanish or baser sort of silk at as dear rates as the
-first Naples and also frequently vending the woven for
-the knit, though in price and goodness there is almost
-half in half difference.” She prays a grant for thirty-one
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_27'>27</span>years for the selling of silk stockings, half stockings
-and waistcoats, to distinguish the woven from the
-knit receiving from the salesmen a shilling for every
-waistcoat, sixpence per pair of silk stockings and
-fourpence for every half pair.<a id='r35' /><a href='#f35' class='c021'><sup>[35]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Elizabeth, Viscountess Savage, points out that Freemen
-of the city enter into bond on their admittance with
-two sureties of a hundred marks to the Chamberlain
-of London not to exercise any trade other than that of
-the Company they were admitted into. Of late years
-persons having used other trades and contrived not
-to have their bonds forfeited, and the penalty belonging
-to His Majesty, she begs a grant of such penalties
-to be recovered at her instance and charge.<a id='r36' /><a href='#f36' class='c021'><sup>[36]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The petition of Margaret Cary, relict of Thomas Cary
-Esquire, one of the Grooms of the Chamber to the
-King on the behalf of herself and her daughters, begs
-for a grant to compound with offenders by engrossering
-and transporting of wool, wool fells, fuller’s earth,
-lead, leather, corn and grain, she to receive a Privy
-Seal for two fourth-parts of the fines and compositions.
-Her reasons for desiring this grant are that her husband’s
-expense in prosecuting like cases has reaped no benefit
-of his grant of seven-eighths of forfeited bonds for the
-like offences. She urges the usefulness of the scheme
-and the existence of similar grants.<a id='r37' /><a href='#f37' class='c021'><sup>[37]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Mistress Dorothy Seymour petitions for a grant of
-the fines imposed on those who export raw hides contrary
-to the Proclamation and thereby make coaches,
-boots, etc., dearer. The reference to the Petition
-states: “It is His Majesty’s gratious pleasure that
-the petitioner cause impoundr. to be given to the
-Attorney General touching the offences above
-mencioned ... and as proffyt shall arise to His
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_28'>28</span>Majesty ... he will give her such part as shall
-fully satisfy her pains and good endeavours.”<a id='r38' /><a href='#f38' class='c021'><sup>[38]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The projecting of patents and monopolies was the
-favourite pursuit of fashionable people of both sexes.
-Ben Johnson satirises the Projectress in the person of
-Lady Tailebush, of whom the Projector, Meercraft
-says:</p>
-
-<p class='c025'> ... “She and I now
-Are on a Project, for the fact, and venting
-Of a new kind of fucus (paint for Ladies)
-To serve the Kingdom; wherein she herself
-Hath travel’d specially, by the way of service
-Unto her sex, and hopes to get the monopoly,
-As the Reward of her Invention.”<a id='r39' /><a href='#f39' class='c021'><sup>[39]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn c028'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c029'>When Eitherside assures her mistress:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c030'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in30'>“I do hear</div>
- <div class='line'>You ha’ cause madam, your suit goes on.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c029'>Lady Tailebush replies:</p>
-
-<p class='c025'>“Yes faith, there’s life in’t now. It is referr’d
-If we once see it under the seals, wench, then,
-Have with ’em, for the great caroch, six horses
-And the two coachmen, with my Ambler bare,
-And my three women; we will live i’ faith,
-The examples o’ the Town, and govern it.
-I’ll lead the fashion still.”...<a id='r40' /><a href='#f40' class='c021'><sup>[40]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn c028'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c029'>From the women who begged for monopolies which
-if granted must have involved much worry and labour
-if they were to be made profitable, we pass naturally
-to women who actually owned and managed businesses
-requiring a considerable amount of capital. They not
-infrequently acted as pawn-brokers and moneylenders.
-Thus, complaint is made that Elizabeth
-Pennell had stolen “two glazier’s vices with the
-screws and appurtenances” and pawned them to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_29'>29</span>one Ellianor Troughton, wife of Samuel Troughton
-broker.<a id='r41' /><a href='#f41' class='c021'><sup>[41]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Richard Braithwaite tells the following story of
-a “Useresse” as though this occupation were
-perfectly usual for women. “Wee reade in a booke
-entituled the <i>Gift of Feare</i>, how a Religious Divine
-comming to a certaine Vseresse to advise her of the
-state of her soule, and instruct her in the way to
-salvation at such time as she lay languishing in her
-bed of affliction; told her how there were three
-things by her to be necessarily performed, if ever she
-hoped to be saved: She must become <i>contrite</i> in
-heart ... <i>confesse</i> her sins ... make
-<i>restitution</i> according to her meanes whereto shee thus
-replyed, <i>Two of those first I will doe willingly: but to
-doe the last, I shall hold it a difficulty; for should I
-make restitution, what would remaine to raise my children
-their portion?</i> To which the Divine answered;
-<i>Without these three you cannot be saved. Yea but</i>,
-quoth shee, <i>Doe our Learned Men and Scriptures say
-so? Yes, surely</i> said the Divine. <i>And I will try</i>,
-(quoth shee) <i>whether they say true or no, for I will
-restore nothing</i>. And so resolving, fearefully dyed
-... for preferring the care of her posterity,
-before the honour of her Maker.”<a id='r42' /><a href='#f42' class='c021'><sup>[42]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The names of women often occur in connection
-with the shipping trade and with contracts. Some
-were engaged in business with their husbands as in the
-case of a fine remitted to Thomas Price and Collet
-his wife for shipping 200 dozen of old shoes, with
-intention to transport them beyond the seas contrary
-to a Statute (5th year Edward VI) on account of their
-poverty.<a id='r43' /><a href='#f43' class='c021'><sup>[43]</sup></a> Others were widows like Anne Hodsall
-whose husband, a London merchant, traded for many
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_30'>30</span>years to the Canary Islands, the greatest part of his
-estate being there. He could not recover it in his lifetime
-owing to the war with Spain and therefore his wife
-was left in great distress with four children. Her
-estate in the Canary Islands is likely to be confiscated,
-there being no means of recovering it thence
-except by importing wines, and it would be necessary
-to take pipe-staves over there to make casks to
-bring back the wines. She begs the council therefore
-“in commiseration of her distressed estate to
-grant a licence to her and her assignes to lade one
-ship here with woollen commodities for Ireland,
-To lade Pipe staves in Ireland (notwithstanding the
-prohibition) and to send the same to the Canary
-Islands.”<a id='r44' /><a href='#f44' class='c021'><sup>[44]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Joseph Holroyd employed a woman as his shipping
-agent; in a letter dated 1706 he writes re certain goods
-for Holland: that these “I presume must be marked
-as usual and forward to Madam Brown at Hull ...”
-and he informs Madam Hannah Browne, that “By
-orders of Mr. John Whittle I have sent you one packe
-and have 2 packes more to send as undʳ. You are to
-follow Mr. Whittle’s directions in shipping.”<a id='r45' /><a href='#f45' class='c021'><sup>[45]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>In 1630 Margrett Greeneway, widow of Thos.
-Greeneway, baker, begged leave to finish carrying out
-a contract made by her husband notwithstanding the
-present restraint on the bringing of corn to London.
-The contract was to supply the East India Company
-with biscuit. Margrett Greeneway petitions to bring
-five hundred quarters of wheat to London—some are
-already bought and she asks for leave to buy the rest.
-The petition was granted.<a id='r46' /><a href='#f46' class='c021'><sup>[46]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>A Petition of “Emanuell Fynche, Wm. Lewis
-Merchantes and Anne Webber Widow on the behalfe
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_31'>31</span>of themselves and others owners of the shipp called the
-<i>Benediction</i>” was presented to the Privy Council
-stating that the ship had been seized and detained by
-the French and kept at Dieppe where it was deteriorating.
-They asked to be allowed to sell her there.<a id='r47' /><a href='#f47' class='c021'><sup>[47]</sup></a>
-The name of another woman ship-owner occurs
-in a case at Grimsby brought against Christopher
-Claton who “In the behalfe of his Mother An Alford,
-wid., hath bought one wessell of Raffe of one Laurence
-Lamkey of Odwell in the kingdome of Norway, upon
-wᶜʰ private bargane there appeares a breach of the
-priviledges of this Corporation.”<a id='r48' /><a href='#f48' class='c021'><sup>[48]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>In 1636 upon the Petition of Susanna Angell
-“widowe, and Eliz. her daughter (an orphan) of the
-cittie of London humbly praying that they might by
-their Lordshipps warrant bee permitted to land 14
-barrels of powder now arrived as also 38 barrells which is
-daily expected in the <i>Fortune</i> they paying custome
-and to sell the same within the kingdome or otherwise
-to give leave to transport it back againe into Holland
-from whence it came” the Officers of the customs were
-ordered to permit the Petitioners to export the
-powder.<a id='r49' /><a href='#f49' class='c021'><sup>[49]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Women’s names appear also in lists of contractors
-to the Army and Navy. Elizabeth Bennett and
-Thomas Berry contracted with the Commissioners
-to supply one hundred suits of apparel for the soldiers
-at Plymouth.<a id='r50' /><a href='#f50' class='c021'><sup>[50]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Cuthbert Farlowe, Elizabeth Harper Widowe, Edward
-Sheldon and John Davis, “poore Tradesmen of London”
-petition “to be paid the £180 yet unpaid of their
-accounts” for furnishing the seamen for Rochelle with
-clothes and shoes “att the rates of ready money.”<a id='r51' /><a href='#f51' class='c021'><sup>[51]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_32'>32</span>A warrant was issued “to pay to Alice Bearden £100
-for certain cutworks furnished to the Queen for her own
-wearing.”<a id='r52' /><a href='#f52' class='c021'><sup>[52]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Edward Prince brought a case in the Star Chamber, v.
-Thomas Woodward, Ellenor Woodward, and Georg.
-Helliar defendants being Ironmongers for supposed
-selling of iron at false weights to undersell plaintiff.
-“Defendants respectively prove that they ever bought
-and sold by one sort of weight.”<a id='r53' /><a href='#f53' class='c021'><sup>[53]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>For her tenancy of the Spy-law Paper Mill, Foulis
-“receaved from Mʳˢ. lithgow by Wᵐ. Douglas
-Hands 85 lib. for ye 1704 monie rent. She owes me
-3 rim of paper for that yeir, besydes 4 rim she owes
-me for former yeirs.”<a id='r54' /><a href='#f54' class='c021'><sup>[54]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Joan Dant was one of the few women “capitalists”
-whose personal story is known in any detail. Her
-husband was a working weaver, living in New
-Paternoster Row, Spital Fields. On his death she
-became a pedlar, carrying an assortment of mercery,
-hosiery, and haberdashery on her back from house to
-house in the vicinity of London. Her conduct as a
-member of the Society of Friends was consistent and her
-manners agreeable, so that her periodic visits to the
-houses of Friends were welcomed and she was frequently
-entertained as a guest at their tables. After some
-years, her expenses being small and her diligence great,
-she had saved sufficient capital to engage in a more
-wholesale trade, debts due from her correspondents
-at Paris and Brussels appearing in her executor’s
-accounts. In spite of her success in trade Joan Dant
-continued to live in her old frugal manner, and when
-she applied to a Friend for assistance in making her
-will, he was astonished to find her worth rather more
-than £9,000. He advised her to obtain the assistance
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_33'>33</span>of other Friends more experienced in such matters.
-On their enquiring how she wished to dispose of her
-property, she replied, “I got it by the rich and I
-mean to leave it to the poor.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Joan Dant died in 1715 at the age of eighty-four.
-In a letter to her executors she wrote, “It is the
-Lord that creates true industry in his people, and that
-blesseth their endeavours in obtaining things necessary
-and convenient for them, which are to be used in
-moderation by all his flock and family everywhere....
-And I, having been one that has taken pains
-to live, and have through the blessing of God, with
-honesty and industrious care, improved my little in
-the world to a pretty good degree; find my heart
-open in that charity which comes from the Lord, in
-which the true disposal of all things ought to be, to do
-something for the poor,—the fatherless and the widows
-in the Church of Christ, according to the utmost of my
-ability.”<a id='r55' /><a href='#f55' class='c021'><sup>[55]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Another venture initiated and carried on by a
-woman, was an Insurance Office established by Dorothy
-Petty. An account of it written in 1710 states that:—“The
-said <i>Dorothy</i> (who is the Daughter of a Divine
-of the Church of <i>England</i>, now deceas’d) did Set up
-an <i>Insurance Office</i> on <i>Births, Marriages, and Services</i>,
-in order thereby to serve the Publick, and get an
-honest Livelyhood for herself.... The said
-<i>Dorothy</i> had such Success in her Undertaking, that
-more Claims were paid, and more Stamps us’d for
-Policies and Certificates in her Office than in all other
-the like Offices in <i>London</i> besides; which good
-Fortune was chiefly owing to the Fairness and Justice
-of her Proceedings in the said Business: for all the
-Money paid into the Office was Entered in one Book,
-and all the Money paid out upon Claims was set down
-in another Book, and all People had Liberty to peruse
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_34'>34</span>both, so that there could not possibly be the least
-Fraud in the Management thereof.”<a id='r56' /><a href='#f56' class='c021'><sup>[56]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>In 1622 the names of Mary Hall, 450 coals, Barbara
-Riddell, 450 coals, Barbara Milburne, 60 coals, are
-included without comment among the brothers of the
-fellowship of Hostmen (coal owners) of Newcastle
-who have coals to rent.<a id='r57' /><a href='#f57' class='c021'><sup>[57]</sup></a> The name of Barbara
-Milburne, widow, is given in the Subsidy Roll for
-1621 as owning land.<a id='r58' /><a href='#f58' class='c021'><sup>[58]</sup></a> That these women were equal
-to the management of their collieries is suggested by
-the fact that when in 1623 Christopher Mitford left
-besides property which he bequeathed direct to his
-nephews and nieces, five salt-pans and collieries to his
-sister Jane Legard he appointed her his executrix,<a id='r59' /><a href='#f59' class='c021'><sup>[59]</sup></a>
-which he would hardly have done unless he had believed
-her equal to the management of a complicated business.</p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The frequency with which widows conducted
-capitalistic enterprises may be taken as evidence of
-the extent to which wives were associated with their
-husbands in business. The wife’s part is sometimes
-shown in prosecutions, as in a case which was brought
-in the Star Chamber against Thomas Hellyard,
-Elizabeth his wife and John Goodenough and Hugh
-Nicholes for oppression in the country under a patent
-to Hellyard for digging saltpetre ... “in
-pursuance of his direction leave and authority ...
-Nicholes Powell, Defendants servant, and the said
-Hellyard’s wife, did sell divers quantities of salt
-petre. More particularly the said Hellyard’s wife
-did sell to Parker 400 lbs. at Haden Wells, 300 or 400
-lbs. at Salisbury and 300 or 400 lbs. at Winchester
-at £9 the hundred.” Hellyard was sentenced to a
-fine of £1,000, pillory, whipping and imprisonment.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_35'>35</span>“As touching the other defendant Elizabeth Hellyard
-the courte was fully satisfyed with sufficient matter
-whereupon to ground a sentence against the defendant
-Eliz. but shee being a wyfe and subject to obey her
-husband theyr Lord ships did forbeare to sentence
-her.”<a id='r60' /><a href='#f60' class='c021'><sup>[60]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Three men, “artificers in glass making,” beg that
-Lady Mansell may either be compelled to allow them
-such wages as they formerly received, or to discharge
-them from her service, her reduction of wages disabling
-them from maintaining their families, and driving
-many of them away.<a id='r61' /><a href='#f61' class='c021'><sup>[61]</sup></a> Lady Mansell submits a
-financial statement and account of the rival glassmakers’
-attempts to ruin her husband’s business, one
-of whom “hath in open audience vowed to spend
-1000li, to ruine your petitioners husband joyninge
-with the Scottish pattentie taking the advantage of
-your petitioners husbands absence, thinckinge your
-petitioner a weake woman unable to followe the
-busines and determininge the utter ruine of your
-petitioner and her husband have inticed three of her
-workemen for windowe glasse, which shee had longe
-kepte att a weeklie chardge to her great prejudice to
-supplie the worke yf there should be anie necessitie in
-the Kingdome,” etc., etc., she begs justice upon the
-rivals, “your petitioner havinge noe other meanes
-nowe in his absence (neither hath he when he shall
-returne) but onelie this busines wherein he hath
-engaged his whole estate.”<a id='r62' /><a href='#f62' class='c021'><sup>[62]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Able business women might be found in every class
-of English society throughout the seventeenth century,
-but their contact with affairs became less habitual
-as the century wore away, and expressions of surprise
-occur at the prowess shown by Dutch women in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_36'>36</span>business. “At <i>Ostend</i>, <i>Newport</i>, and <i>Dunkirk</i>,
-where, and when, the <i>Holland</i> pinks come in, there
-daily the Merchants, that be but Women (but not
-such Women as the Fishwives of <i>Billingsgate</i>; for these
-<i>Netherland</i> Women do lade many Waggons with fresh
-Fish daily, some for <i>Bruges</i>, and some for <i>Brussels</i>,
-etc., etc.) I have seen these Women-merchants
-I say, have their Aprons full of nothing but <i>English
-Jacobuses</i>, to make all their Payment of.”<a id='r63' /><a href='#f63' class='c021'><sup>[63]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Sir J. Child mentions “the Education of their
-Children as well Daughters as Sons; all which, be they
-of never so great quality or estate, they always take care
-to bring up to write perfect good Hands, and to
-have the full knowledge and use of Arithmetick and
-Merchant Accounts,” as one of the advantages which
-the Dutch possess over the English; “the well
-understanding and practise whereof doth strangely
-infuse into most that are the owners of that Quality,
-of either Sex, not only an Ability for Commerce of all
-kinds, but a strong aptitude, love and delight in it;
-and in regard the women are as knowing therein as
-the Men, it doth incourage their Husbands to hold on
-in their Trades to their dying days, knowing the
-capacity of their Wives to get in their Estates, and
-carry on their Trades after their Deaths: Whereas if
-a Merchant in England arrive at any considerable
-Estate, he commonly with-draws his Estate from Trade,
-before he comes near the confines of Old Age;
-reckoning that if God should call him out of the World
-while the main of his Estate is engaged abroad in
-Trade, he must lose one third of it, through the unexperience
-and unaptness of his Wife to such Affairs,
-and so it usually falls out. Besides it hath been observed
-in the nature of Arithmetick, that like other parts
-of the Mathematicks, it doth not only improve the
-Rational Faculties, but inclines those that are expert
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_37'>37</span>in it to Thriftiness and good Husbandry, and prevents
-both Husbands and Wives in some measure from
-running out of their estates.”<a id='r64' /><a href='#f64' class='c021'><sup>[64]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>This account is confirmed by Howell who writes of
-the Dutch in 1622 that they are “well versed in all
-sorts of languages.... Nor are the Men only expert
-therein but the Women and Maids also in their common
-Hostries; &amp; in Holland the Wives are so well versed
-in Bargaining, Cyphering &amp; Writing, that in the
-Absence of their Husbands in long sea voyages they
-beat the Trade at home &amp; their Words will pass in
-equal Credit. These Women are wonderfully sober,
-tho’ their Husbands make commonly their Bargains
-in Drink, &amp; then are they more cautelous.”<a id='r65' /><a href='#f65' class='c021'><sup>[65]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>This unnatural reversing of the positions of men and
-women was censured by the Spaniard Vives who wrote
-“In Hollande, women do exercise marchandise and
-the men do geue themselues to quafting, the which
-customes and maners I alowe not, for thei agre not with
-nature, yᵉ which hath geuen unto man a noble, a high
-&amp; a diligent minde to be busye and occupied abroade,
-to gayne &amp; to bring home to their wiues &amp; families
-to rule them and their children, ... and to yᵉ
-woman nature hath geuen a feareful, a couetous &amp; an
-humble mind to be subject unto man, &amp; to kepe yᵗ
-he doeth gayne.”<a id='r66' /><a href='#f66' class='c021'><sup>[66]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The contrast which had arisen between Dutch and
-English customs in this respect was also noticed by
-Wycherley, one of whose characters, Monsieur Paris,
-a Francophile fop, describes his tour in Holland in the
-following terms: “I did visit, you must know, one of
-de Principal of de State General ... and did find his
-Excellence weighing Sope, jarnie ha, ha, ha, weighing
-sope, ma foy, for he was a wholesale Chandeleer; and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_38'>38</span>his Lady was taking de Tale of Chandels wid her own
-witer Hands, ma foy; and de young Lady, his Excellence
-Daughter, stringing Harring, jarnie ... his
-Son, (for he had but one) was making the Tour of
-France, etc. in a Coach and six.”<a id='r67' /><a href='#f67' class='c021'><sup>[67]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The picture is obviously intended to throw ridicule
-on the neighbouring state, of whose navy and commercial
-progress England stood at that time in considerable
-fear.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>How rapidly the active, hardy life of the Elizabethan
-gentlewoman was being transformed into the
-idleness and dependence which has characterised
-the lady of a later age may be judged by Mary Astell’s
-comment on “Ladies of Quality.” She says, “They are
-placed in a condition which makes that which is everyone’s
-chief business to be their only employ. They
-have nothing to do but to glorify God and to benefit
-their neighbours.”<a id='r68' /><a href='#f68' class='c021'><sup>[68]</sup></a> After a study of the Restoration
-Drama it may be doubted whether the ladies
-of that period wished to employ their leisure over
-these praiseworthy objects. But had they the will,
-ignorance of life and inexperience in affairs are
-qualifications which perhaps would not have increased
-the effectiveness of their efforts in either direction.</p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The proof of the change which was taking place
-in the scope of upper-class women’s interests does not
-rest only upon individual examples such as those
-which have been quoted, though these instances have
-been selected for the most part on account of their
-representative character.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>It is quite clear that the occupation of ladies with
-their husband’s affairs was accepted as a matter of course
-throughout the earlier part of the century, and it is
-only after the Restoration that a change of fashion in this
-respect becomes evident. Pepys, whose milieu was
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_39'>39</span>typical of the new social order, after a call upon Mr.
-Bland, commented with surprised pleasure on Mrs.
-Bland’s interest in her husband’s affairs. “Then to eat
-a dish of anchovies,” he says “and drink wine and syder
-and very merry, but above all things, pleased to hear Mrs.
-Bland talk like a merchant in her husband’s business
-very well, and it seems she do understand it and
-perform a great deal.”<a id='r69' /><a href='#f69' class='c021'><sup>[69]</sup></a> The capacity of a woman
-to understand her husband’s business seldom aroused
-comment earlier in the century, and would have
-passed unnoticed even by many of Pepys’ contemporaries
-who lived in a different set. Further evidence
-of women’s business capacity is found in the fact that
-men generally expected their wives would prove equal
-to the administration of their estates after their death,
-and thus the wife was habitually appointed executrix
-often even the sole executrix of wills. This custom
-was certainly declining in the latter part of the
-century. The winding up of a complicated estate and
-still more the prosecution of an extensive business,
-could not have been successfully undertaken by persons
-who hitherto had led lives of idleness, unacquainted
-with the direction of affairs.</p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>That men did not at this time regard marriage as
-necessarily involving the assumption of a serious
-economic burden, but on the contrary, often considered
-it to be a step which was likely to strengthen them in
-life’s battles, is also significant. This attitude was
-partly due to the provision of a dot by fathers of
-brides, but there were other ways in which the wife
-contributed to the support of her household. Thus
-in a wedding sermon woman is likened to a merchant’s
-ship, for “She bringeth her food from far” ...
-not meaning she is to be chosen for her dowry, “for
-the worst wives may have the best portions, ...
-a good wife tho’ she bring nothing in with her, yet,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_40'>40</span>thro’ her Wisdom and Diligence great things come in
-by her; she brings in with her hands, for, <i>She putteth her
-hands to the wheel</i>.... If she be too high to
-stain her Hands with bodily Labour, yet she
-bringeth in with her Eye, for, <i>She overseeth the
-Ways of her Household</i>, ... and eateth not the
-Bread of <i>Idleness</i>.” She provides the necessities of
-life. “If she will have Bread, she must not always
-buy it, but she must sow it, and reap it and grind it,
-... She must knead it, and make it into bread.
-Or if she will have Cloth, she must not always run to
-the Shop or to the score but she begins at the seed,
-she carrieth her seed to the Ground, she gathereth Flax,
-of her Flax she spinneth a Thread, of her Thread she
-weaveth Cloth, and so she comes by her coat.”<a id='r70' /><a href='#f70' class='c021'><sup>[70]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The woman here described was the mistress of a
-large household, who found scope for her productive
-energy within the limits of domestic industry, but it
-has been shown that the married woman often went
-farther than this, and engaged in trade either as her
-husband’s assistant or even on her own account.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The effect of such work on the development of
-women’s characters was very great, for any sort of
-productive, that is to say, creative work, provides a
-discipline and stimulus to growth essentially different
-from any which can be acquired in a life devoted
-to spending money and the cultivation of ornamental
-qualities.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The effect on social relations was also marked, for
-their work implied an association of men and women
-through a wide range of human interests and a consequent
-development of society along organic rather than
-mechanical lines. The relation between husband and
-wife which obtained most usually among the upper
-classes in England at the opening of the seventeenth
-century, appears indeed to have been that of partnership;
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_41'>41</span>the chief responsibility for the care of children and
-the management and provisioning of her household
-resting on the wife’s shoulders, while in business
-matters she was her husband’s lieutenant. The wife
-was subject to her husband, her life was generally an
-arduous one, but she was by no means regarded as
-his servant. A comradeship existed between them
-which was stimulating and inspiring to both. The
-ladies of the Elizabethan period possessed courage,
-initiative, resourcefulness and wit in a high degree.
-Society expected them to play a great part in the
-national life and they rose to the occasion; perhaps
-it was partly the comradeship with their husbands
-in the struggle for existence which developed in them
-qualities which had otherwise atrophied.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Certainly the more circumscribed lives of the
-Restoration ladies show a marked contrast in
-this respect, for they appear but shadows of the
-vigorous personalities of their grandmothers. Prominent
-amongst the many influences which conspired
-together to produce so rapid a decline in the physique,
-efficiency and morale of upper-class women, must be
-reckoned the spread of the capitalistic organisation of
-industry, which by the rapid growth of wealth made
-possible the idleness of growing numbers of women.
-Simultaneously the gradual perfecting by men of their
-separate organisations for trade purposes rendered them
-independent of the services of their wives and families
-for the prosecution of their undertakings. Though the
-stern hand of economic necessity was thus withdrawn
-from the control of women’s development in the
-upper classes, it was still potent in determining their
-destiny amongst the “common people,” whose circumstances
-will be examined in detail in the following
-chapters.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c001' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_42'>42</span>
- <h2 class='c011'><span class='sc'>Chapter III</span><br /> <br />AGRICULTURE</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c019'>Agriculture England’s leading Industry—Has provided the most vigorous
-stock of English race—Division into three classes:—</p>
-
-<p class='c031'>(A) <i>Farmers.</i> Portraits of Farmers’ Wives—Fitzherbert’s
-“Prologue for the Wyves Occupacyon.” Size of household—The Wife who
-“doth not take the pains and charge upon her.” Financial
-aptitude—Market—Occupation of gentlewomen with Dairy and
-Poultry—Expectation of the wife’s ability to work and do service.</p>
-
-<p class='c031'>(B) <i>Husbandmen.</i> Economy of their Small Holding—The more they
-worked for wages the greater their poverty—Strenuous but healthy life
-of the women—Extent to which they worked for wages—Character of
-work—Best’s account of Yorkshire Farms—other descriptions.
-Spinning—The wife’s industry no less constant when not working for
-wages, but more profitable to her family, whom she clothed and fed by
-domestic industry.</p>
-
-<p class='c031'>(C) <i>Wage-earners.</i> Maximum rates of wages fixed at Assizes
-represent generally those actually paid. Common labourers’ wage,
-winter and summer—Women’s wages seasonal—Not expected when married to
-work week in, week out. Cost of living—Cost of labourers’
-diet—Pensions and Allowances—Poor Relief—Cost of clothes and
-rent—Joint wages of father and mother insufficient to rear three
-children—Recognised insolvency of Labourers’ Family—Disputes
-concerning labourers’ settlements. Farmers’ need for more
-labourers—Demoralisation—Demand for sureties by the Parish. Infant
-mortality—Life history of labourers’ wives—Explanation for
-magistrates’ action in fixing maximum wages below subsistence
-level—Proportion of wage-earning families.</p>
-<p class='c023'><span class='sc'>Although</span> the woollen trade loomed very large
-upon the political horizon because it was a chief
-source of revenue to the Crown and because rapidly
-acquired wealth gave an influence to clothiers and
-wool merchants out of proportion to their numbers,
-agriculture was still England’s chief industry in
-the seventeenth century.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The town population has had a tendency to wear out
-and must be recruited from rural districts. The
-village communities which still persisted at this period
-in England, provided a vigorous stock, from which the
-men whose initiative, energy and courage have made
-England famous during the last two centuries were
-largely descended. Not only were the farming families
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_43'>43</span>prolific in numbers but they maintained a high
-standard of mental and moral virtue. It must be
-supposed therefore that the conditions in which they
-lived were upon the whole favourable to the development
-of their women-folk, but investigation will
-show that this was not the case for all members alike of
-the agricultural community, who may be roughly
-divided into three classes:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>(a) Farmers. (b) Husbandmen. (c) Wage-earners.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>(a) <i>Farmers</i> held sufficient land for the complete
-maintenance of the family. Their household often
-included hired servants and their methods on the
-larger farms were becoming capitalistic.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>(b) <i>Husbandmen</i> were possessed of holdings insufficient
-for the complete maintenance of the family and
-their income was therefore supplemented by working
-for wages.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>(c) <i>Wage-earners</i> had no land, not even a garden,
-and depended therefore completely on wages for the
-maintenance of their families.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>In addition to the above, for whom agriculture was
-their chief business, the families of the gentry, professional
-men and tradesmen who lived in the country
-and smaller towns, generally grew sufficient dairy and
-garden produce for domestic consumption.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The above classification is arbitrary, for no hard-and-fast
-division existed. Farmers merged imperceptibly
-into husbandmen, and husbandmen into
-wage-earners and yet there was a wide gulf separating
-their positions. As will be shown, it was the women
-of the first two classes who bore and reared the children
-who were destined to be the makers of England,
-while few children of the wage-earning class reached
-maturity.</p>
-<h3 class='c032'>A. <i>Farmers.</i></h3>
-
-<p class='c029'>However important the women who were the mothers
-of the race may appear to modern eyes, their history
-was unnoticed by their contemporaries and no analysis
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_44'>44</span>was made of their development. The existence of
-vigorous, able matrons was accepted as a matter of
-course. They embodied the seventeenth century
-idea of the “eternal feminine” and no one suspected
-that they might change with a changing environment.
-They themselves were too busy, too much absorbed
-in the lives of others, to keep journals and they were
-not sufficiently important to have their memoirs
-written by other people.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Perhaps their most authentic portraits may be
-found in the writings of the Quakers, who were largely
-drawn from this class of the community. They
-depict women with an exalted devotion, supporting
-their families and strengthening their husbands
-through the storms of persecution and amidst
-the exacting claims of religion.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>John Banks wrote from Carlisle Prison in 1648
-to his wife, “No greater Joy and Comfort I have in
-this world ... than to know that thou and all
-thine are well both in Body and Mind ... though
-I could be glad to see thee here, but do not
-straiten thyself in any wise, for I am truly content to
-bear it, if it were much more, considering thy Concerns
-in this Season of the Year, being Harvest time and the
-Journey so long.”<a id='r71' /><a href='#f71' class='c021'><sup>[71]</sup></a> After her death he writes, “We
-Lived Comfortably together many Years, and she was
-a Careful Industrious Woman in bringing up of her
-Children in good order, as did become the Truth, in
-Speech, Behaviour and Habit; a Meet-Help and a
-good Support to me, upon the account of my Travels,
-always ready and willing to fit me with Necessaries,
-... and was never known to murmur, tho’ I was
-often Concerned, to leave her with a weak Family,...
-She was well beloved amongst good Friends and
-of her Neighbours, as witness the several hundreds that
-were at her Burial ... our Separation by Death,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_45'>45</span>was the greatest Trial that ever I met with, above anything
-here below. Now if any shall ask, Why I have
-writ so many Letters at large to be Printed ...
-how can any think that I should do less than I have
-done, to use all Endeavours what in me lay, to Strengthen
-and Encourage my Dear Wife, whom I so often,
-and for so many Years was made to leave as aforesaid,
-having pretty much concerns to look after.”<a id='r72' /><a href='#f72' class='c021'><sup>[72]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Of another Quaker, Mary Batt, her father writes in
-her testimony that she was “Married to <i>Phillip
-Tyler</i> of <i>Waldon</i> in the County of <i>Somerset</i> before she
-attained the age of twenty years.... The Lord
-blessed her with Four Children, whereof two dyed
-in their Infancy, and two yet remain alive: at the
-Burial of her Husband, for being present, she had two
-Cows valued at Nine Pounds taken from her, which,
-with many other Tryals during her Widowhood, she
-bore with much Patience,... After she had
-remained a Widow about four Years, the Lord drew
-the affection of <i>James Taylor</i> ... to seek her
-to be his Wife, and there being an answer in her, the
-Lord joyned them together. To her Husband her
-Love and Subjection was suitable to that Relation,
-being greatly delighted in his Company, and a Meet-Help,
-a faithful Yoak-fellow, ... and in his
-Absence, not only carefully discharging the duty as
-her Place as a Wife, but diligent to supply his Place
-in those affairs that more immediately concerned
-him.”<a id='r73' /><a href='#f73' class='c021'><sup>[73]</sup></a> And her husband adds in his testimony, “My
-outward Affairs falling all under her charge (I,
-being absent, a Prisoner for my Testimony against
-Tythes) she did manage the same in such care and
-patience until the time she was grown big with Child,
-and as she thought near the time of her Travail (a
-condition much to be born with and pittyed) she then
-desired so much Liberty as to have my Company home
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_46'>46</span>two Weeks, and went herself to request it, which
-small matter she could not obtain, but was denyed;
-and as I understood by her, it might be one of the
-greatest occasions of her grief which ever happened
-unto her, yet in much Meekness and true Patience
-she stooped down, and quietly took up this her last
-Cross also, and is gone with it and all the rest, out of the
-reach of all her Enemies, ... Three Nights and
-Two Days before her Death, I was admitted to come
-to her, though I may say (with grief) too late, yet it
-was to her great joy to see me once more whom she
-so dearly loved; and would not willingly suffer me
-any more to depart out of her sight until she had
-finished her days, ... Her Sufferings (in the
-condition she was in) although I was a Prisoner, were
-far greater then mine, for the whole time that she
-became my Wife, which was some Weeks above Three
-Years, notwithstanding there was never yet man,
-woman, nor child, could justly say, she had given them
-any offence ... yet must ... unreasonable men
-cleanse our Fields of Cattle, rummage our House of
-Goods, and make such havock as that my Dear Wife
-had not wherewithal to dress or set Food before me
-and her Children.”<a id='r74' /><a href='#f74' class='c021'><sup>[74]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The duties of a Farmer’s wife were described a
-hundred years earlier by Fitzherbert in the “Boke of
-Husbandrie.” He begins the “Prologue for the
-wyves occupacyon,” thus, “Now thou husbande that
-hast done thy diligence and laboure that longeth to a
-husband to get thy liuing, thy wyues, thy children,
-and thy seruauntes, yet is there other thynges to be
-doen that nedes must be done, or els thou shalt not
-thryue. For there is an olde common saying, that
-seldom doth ye husbande thriue without leue of his
-wyf. By thys saying it shuld seem that ther be other
-occupaciõs and labours that be most cõvenient
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_47'>47</span>for the wyfes to do, and how be it that I haue not the
-experience of all their occupacyions and workes as I
-haue of husbandry, yet a lytel wil I speake what they
-ought to do though I tel thẽ not how they should
-do and excersyse their labour and occupacions.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“<i>A lesson for the wyfe</i> ... alway be doyng
-of some good workes that the deuil may fynde the
-alway occupied, for as in a standyng water are engendred
-wormes, right so in an idel body are engendered
-ydel thoughtes. Here maie thou see yᵗ of idelnes
-commeth damnatiõ, &amp; of good workes and labour
-commeth saluacion. Now thou art at thy libertie to
-chose whither waye thou wilte, wherein is great
-diversite. And he is an unhappye man or woman that
-god hath given both wit &amp; reason and putteth him in
-choise &amp; he to chose the worst part. Nowe thou
-wife I trust to shewe unto the diuers occupacions,
-workes and labours that thou shalt not nede to be
-ydel no tyme of yᵉ yere. What thinges the wife is
-bounde of right to do. Firste and principally the wyfe
-is bound of right to loue her husband aboue father
-and mother and al other men....</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“What workes a wyfe should do in generall. First
-in the mornyng when thou art wakéd and purpose
-to rise, lift up thy hãd &amp; blis the &amp; make a signe of
-the holy crosse ... and remembre thy maker
-and thou shalte spede muche the better, &amp; when thou
-art up and readye, then firste swepe thy house;
-dresse up thy dyscheborde, &amp; set al thynges in good
-order within thy house, milke yᵉ kie, socle thy calues,
-sile up thy milke, take up thy children &amp; aray thẽ,
-&amp; provide for thy husbandes breakefaste, diner,
-souper, &amp; for thy children &amp; seruauntes, &amp; take thy
-parte wyth them. And to ordeyne corne &amp; malt to
-the myll, to bake and brue withall whẽ nede is.
-And mete it to the myll and fro the myll, &amp; se that
-thou haue thy mesure agayne besides the tole or elles
-the mylner dealeth not truly wyth the, or els thy corne
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_48'>48</span>is not drye as it should be, thou must make butter and
-chese when thou may, serue thy swine both mornyng
-and eueninge, and giue thy polen meate in the mornynge,
-and when tyme of yeare cometh thou must take
-hede how thy henne, duckes, and geese do ley, and to
-gather up their egges and when they waxe broudy to set
-them there as no beastes, swyne, nor other vermyne
-hurte them, and thou must know that all hole foted
-foule wil syt a moneth and al clouen foted foule wyl
-syt but three wekes except a peyhen and suche other
-great foules as craynes, bustardes, and suche other.
-And when they haue brought forth theyr birdes
-to se that they be well kepte from the gleyd, crowes,
-fully martes and other vermyn, and in the begynyng
-of March, of a lytle before is time for a wife to make
-her garden and to get as manye good sedes and herbes
-as she can, and specyally such as be good for the pot
-and for to eate &amp; as ofte as nede shall require it muste
-be weded, for els the wede wyll ouer grow the herbes,
-and also in Marche is time to sowe flaxe and hempe,
-for I haue heard olde huswyues say, that better is
-Marche hurdes then Apryll flaxe, the reason appereth,
-but howe it shoulde be sowen, weded, pulled, repealed,
-watred, washen, dried, beten, braked, tawed, hecheled,
-spon, wounden, wrapped, &amp; ouen. It nedeth not for
-me to shewe for they be wyse ynough, and thereof may
-they make shetes, bord clothes, towels, shertes, smockes,
-and suche other necessaryes, and therfore lette thy
-dystaffe be alwaye redy for a pastyme, that thou be
-not ydell. And undoubted a woman cannot get her
-livinge honestly with spinning on the dystaffe, but
-it stoppeth a gap and must nedes be had. The
-bolles of flaxe whan they be rypled of, muste be rediled
-from the wedes and made dry with the sunne to
-get out the seedes. How be it one maner of
-linsede called lokensede wyll not open by the sunne,
-and therefore when they be drye they must be sore
-bruien and broken the wyves know how, &amp; then
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_49'>49</span>wynowed and kept dry til peretime cum againe.
-Thy femell hempe must be pulled fro the chucle
-hẽpe for this beareth no sede &amp; thou muste doe by it
-as thou didest by the flaxe. The chucle hempe doth
-beare seed &amp; thou must beware that birdes eate it not
-as it groweth, the hempe thereof is not so good as
-the femel hẽpe, but yet it wil do good seruice. It
-may fortune sometime yᵗ thou shalte haue so many
-thinges to do that thou shalte not wel know where is
-best to begyn. Thẽ take hede whiche thinge should
-be the greatest losse if it were not done &amp; in what space
-it would be done, and then thinke what is the greatest
-loss &amp; there begin.... It is cõvenient for a
-husbande to haue shepe of his owne for many causes,
-and then may his wife have part of the wooll to make
-her husbande and her selfe sum clothes. And at the
-least waye she may haue yᵉ lockes of the shepe therwith
-to make clothes or blankets, and couerlets, or both.
-And if she haue no wol of her owne she maye take woll
-to spynne of cloth makers, and by that meanes she
-may have a conuenient liuing, and many tymes to do
-other workes. It is a wiues occupacion to winow al
-maner of cornes, to make malte wash and wring, to
-make hey, to shere corne, and in time of nede to helpe
-her husbande to fyll the mucke wayne or donge carte,
-dryve the plough, to lode hey, corne &amp; such other.
-Also to go or ride to the market to sell butter, chese,
-mylke, egges, chekens, kapons, hennes, pygges, gees,
-and al maner of corne. And also to bye al maner of
-necessary thinges belonging to a houshold, and to
-make a true rekening &amp; accompt to her husband
-what she hath receyued and what she hathe payed.
-And yf the husband go to the market to bye or sell
-as they ofte do, he then to shew his wife in lyke maner.
-For if one of them should use to disceiue the other,
-he disceyveth him selfe, and he is not lyke to thryve,
-&amp; therfore they must be true ether to other.”<a id='r75' /><a href='#f75' class='c021'><sup>[75]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_50'>50</span>Fitzherbert’s description of the wife’s occupation
-probably remained true in many districts during the
-seventeenth century. The dairy, poultry, garden
-and orchard were then regarded as peculiarly the
-domain of the mistress, but upon the larger farms she
-did not herself undertake the household drudgery.
-Her duty was to organise and train her servants, both
-men and women.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The wages assessments of the period give some idea
-of the size of farmers’ households, fixing wages for the
-woman-servant taking charge of maulting in great
-farms, every other maulster, the best mayde servant
-that can brewe, bake and dresse meate, the second
-mayd servant, the youngest mayd servant, a woman
-being skilful in ordering a house, dayry mayd, laundry
-mayd, and also for the men servants living in the
-house, the bailiff of husbandry, the chief hinde, and
-the common man-servant, the shepherd, and the
-carter.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>That some women already aspired to a life of leisure
-is shown in an assessment for the East Riding of
-Yorkshire, which provides a special rate of wages for
-the woman-servant “that taketh charge of brewing,
-baking, kitching, milk house or malting, that is
-hired with a gentleman or rich yeoman, whose wife
-doth not take the pains and charge upon her.”<a id='r76' /><a href='#f76' class='c021'><sup>[76]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>In addition to the management of the dairy, etc.,
-the farmer’s wife often undertook the financial side
-of the business. Thus Josselin notes in his Diary:
-“This day was good wife Day with mee; I perceive
-she is resolved to give mee my price for my farme of
-Mallories, and I intend to lett it goe.” A few days
-later he enters “This day I surrendered Mallories
-and the appurtenances to Day of Halsted and his
-daughter.”<a id='r77' /><a href='#f77' class='c021'><sup>[77]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_51'>51</span>The farmer’s wife attended market with great
-regularity, where she became thoroughly expert in the
-art of buying and selling. The journey to market
-often involved a long ride on horseback, not always
-free from adventure as is shown by information given
-to the Justices by Maud, wife of Thomas Collar of
-Woolavington, who stated that as she was returning
-home by herself from Bridgwater market on or about
-7th July, Adrian Towes of Marke, overtook her and
-calling her ugly toad demanded her name; he then
-knocked her down and demanded her purse, to which,
-hiding her purse, she replied that she had bestowed
-all her money in the market. He then said, ‘I think
-you are a Quaker,’ &amp; she denied it, he compelled her
-to kneel down on her bare knees and swear by
-the Lord’s blood that she was not, which to save her
-life she did. Another woman then came up and
-rebuked the said Towes, whereupon he struck her down
-‘atwhart’ her saddle into one of her panniers.<a id='r78' /><a href='#f78' class='c021'><sup>[78]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Market was doubtless the occasion of much gossip,
-but it may also have been the opportunity for a wide
-interchange of views and opinions on subjects important
-to the well-being of the community. While
-market was frequented by all the women of the
-neighbourhood it must certainly have favoured
-the formation of a feminine public opinion on current
-events, which prevented individual women from
-relying exclusively upon their husbands for information
-and advice.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The names of married women constantly appear in
-money transactions, their receipt being valid for
-debts due to their husbands. Thus Sarah Fell enters
-in her Household Book, “Pd. Bridget Pindʳ in full
-of her Husband’s bills as appeares £3. 17<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>”<a id='r79' /><a href='#f79' class='c021'><sup>[79]</sup></a> by mᵒ
-pᵈ Anthony Towers wife in pᵗ foʳ manneʳ wee are to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_52'>52</span>have of heʳ 1.00<a id='r80' /><a href='#f80' class='c021'><sup>[80]</sup></a> to mᵒ Recᵈ. of Myles Gouth wife
-foʳ ploughing for her 1.04”<a id='r81' /><a href='#f81' class='c021'><sup>[81]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Arithmetic was not considered a necessary item
-in the education of girls, though as the following
-incident shows, women habitually acted in financial
-matters.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Samuel Bownas had been sent to gaol for tithe, but
-the Parson could not rest and let him out, when he
-went to Bristol on business and spent two weeks
-visiting meetings in Wiltshire. After his return, while
-away from home a distant relation called and
-asked his wife to lend him ten pounds as he was
-going to a fair. She not thinking of tithe which was
-much more, lent it and he gave her a note, which
-action was approved by her husband on his return;
-but the relation returned again in Samuel Bownas’s
-absence to repay, and tore the note as soon as he received
-it, giving her a quittance for the tithe instead.
-She was indignant, saying it would destroy her
-husband’s confidence in her. The relation assured her
-that he would declare her innocence, but he could
-not have persuaded her husband, for “he would
-have started so many questions that I could not possibly
-have affected it any other way than by ploughing
-with his heifer.”<a id='r82' /><a href='#f82' class='c021'><sup>[82]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Women’s names frequently occur in presentments
-at Quarter Sessions for infringements of bye-laws.
-The Salford Portmote “p’sent Isabell the wyef of
-Edmunde Howorthe for that she kept her swyne
-unlawfull, and did trespas to the corn of the said
-Raphe Byrom.”<a id='r83' /><a href='#f83' class='c021'><sup>[83]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Katharine Davie was presented “for not paving
-before her doore.” Mrs. Elizabeth Parkhurst for
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_53'>53</span>“layinge a dunghill anenst her barne and not makinge
-the street cleane.” Isabell Dawson and Edmund
-Cowper for the like and Mrs. Byrom and some men
-“for letting swyne go unringed and trespassinge into
-his neighbors corne &amp; rescowinge them when they
-have beene sent to the fould.”<a id='r84' /><a href='#f84' class='c021'><sup>[84]</sup></a> “Charles Gregorie’s
-wife complained that shee is distrained for 3<i>s.</i> for an
-amerciament for hoggs goeing in the Streete whereupon,
-upon her tendring of 3<i>s.</i> xijd is restored
-with her flaggon.”<a id='r85' /><a href='#f85' class='c021'><sup>[85]</sup></a> The owner of the pig appears
-very often to be a married woman. At Carlisle in
-1619: “We amarye the wief of John Barwicke for
-keping of swine troughes in the hye streyt contrary
-the paine and therefore in amercyment according to
-the orders of this cyttie, xiii<i>d.</i>”<a id='r86' /><a href='#f86' class='c021'><sup>[86]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Such women may often not have been farmers
-in the full sense of the word, but merely kept
-a few pigs to supplement the family income. Even the
-gentry were not too proud to sell farm and garden
-produce not needed for family consumption, and are
-alluded to as “... our Country Squires, who
-sell Calves and Runts, and their Wives perhaps Cheese
-and Apples.”<a id='r87' /><a href='#f87' class='c021'><sup>[87]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Many gentlewomen were proficient in dairy management.
-Richard Braithwaite writes of his wife:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c030'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Oft have I seen her from her Dayrey come</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Attended by her maids, and hasting home</div>
- <div class='line in1'>To entertain some Guests of Quality</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Shee would assume a state so modestly</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Sance affectation, as she struck the eye</div>
- <div class='line in1'>With admiration of the stander-by.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c029'>The whole management of the milch cows belonged
-to the wife, not only among farming people but also
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_54'>54</span>among the gentry. The proceeds were regarded as
-her pin-money, and her husband generally handed over
-to her all receipts on this account, Sir John Foulis
-for example entering in his account book: “June 30
-1693. To my wife yᵉ pryce of yᵉ gaird kowes
-Hyde, £4 0 0.”<a id='r88' /><a href='#f88' class='c021'><sup>[88]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Sometimes when the husband devoted himself to
-good fellowship, the farm depended almost entirely
-on his wife; this was the case with Adam Eyre, a
-retired Captain, who enters in his Dyurnall,
-<i>Feb. 10, 1647</i>, “This morning Godfrey Bright
-bought my horse of my wife, and gave her £5, and
-promised to give her 20<i>s.</i> more, which I had all but
-20<i>s.</i> and shee is to take in the corne sale £4.” <i>May 18,
-1647</i>, “I came home with Raph Wordsworth of the
-Water hall who came to buy a bull on my wife, who
-was gone into Holmefrith.”<a id='r89' /><a href='#f89' class='c021'><sup>[89]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The business capacity of married women was even
-more valuable in families where the father wished to
-devote his talents to science, politics, or religion, unencumbered
-by anxiety for his children’s maintenance.
-It is said in Peter Heylin’s Life that “Being deprived
-of Ecclesiastical preferments, he must think of some
-honest way for a livelihood. Yet notwithstanding he
-followed his studies, in which was his chief delight....
-In which pleasing study while he spent his time, his
-good wife, a discreet and active lady, looked both after
-her Housewifery within doors, and the Husbandry
-without; thereby freeing him from that care and
-trouble, which otherwise would have hindered his
-laborious Pen from going through so great a work in
-that short time. And yet he had several divertisements
-by company, which continually resorted to his
-house; for having (God be thanked) his temporal
-Estate cleared from Sequestration, by his Composition
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_55'>55</span>with the Commissioners at <i>Goldsmith’s Hall</i>, and this
-Estate which he Farmed besides, he was able to keep a
-good House, and relieve his poor brethren.”<a id='r90' /><a href='#f90' class='c021'><sup>[90]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Gregory King’s father was a student of mathematics,
-“and practised surveying of land, and dyalling, as a
-profession; but with more attention to <i>good-fellowship</i>,
-than mathematical studies generally allow: and,
-the care of the family devolved of course on the
-mother, who, if she had been less obscure, had emulated
-the most eminent of the Roman matrons.”<a id='r91' /><a href='#f91' class='c021'><sup>[91]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Adam Martindale’s wife was equally successful. He
-writes “about Michaelmas, 1662, removed my family
-from the Vicarage to a little house at Camp-greene,
-... where we dwelt above three years and half....
-I was three score pounds in debt, ... but (God
-be praised) while I staid there I paid off all that debt
-and bestowed £40 upon mareling part of my ground in
-Tatton.... If any aske how this could be
-without a Miracle, he may thus be satisfied. I had
-sent me ... £41 ... and the £10 my wife
-wrangled out of my successor, together with a table,
-formes and ceiling, sold him for about £4 more.”<a id='r92' /><a href='#f92' class='c021'><sup>[92]</sup></a>
-Later on he adds “My family finding themselves
-straitened for roome, and my wife being willing to
-keep a little stock of kine, as she had done formerly,
-and some inconvenience falling out (as is usual) by
-two families under a roofe, removed to a new house
-not completely furnished.”<a id='r93' /><a href='#f93' class='c021'><sup>[93]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>That in the agricultural community women were
-generally supposed to be, from a business point of
-view, a help and not a hindrance to their husbands—that
-in fact the wife was not “kept” by him but helped
-him to support the family is shown by terms proposed
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_56'>56</span>for colonists in Virginia by the Merchant Taylors who
-offer “one hundred acres for every man’s person that
-hath a trade, or a body able to endure day labour as
-much for his wief, as much for his child, that are of
-yeres to doe service to the Colony.”<a id='r94' /><a href='#f94' class='c021'><sup>[94]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-<h3 class='c032'>B. <i>Husbandmen.</i></h3>
-
-<p class='c029'>Husbandmen were probably the most numerous
-class in the village community. Possessed of a small
-holding at a fixed customary rent and with rights of
-grazing on the common, they could maintain a position
-of independence.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Statute 31 Eliz., forbidding the erection of cottages
-without four acres of land attached, was framed with
-the intention of protecting the husbandman against
-the encroachments of capitalists, for a family which
-could grow its own supply of food on four acres of
-land would be largely independent of the farmer, as the
-father could earn the money for the rent, etc., by
-working only at harvest when wages were highest. As
-however this seasonal labour was not sufficient for the
-farmers’ demands, such independence was not wholly
-to their mind, and they complained of the idleness
-of husbandmen who would not work for the wages
-offered. Thus it was said that “In all or most towns,
-where the fields lie open there is a new brood of
-upstart intruders or inmates ... loiterers who will
-not work unless they may have such excessive wages
-as they themselves desire.”<a id='r95' /><a href='#f95' class='c021'><sup>[95]</sup></a> “There is with us now
-rather a scarcity than a superfluity of servants, their
-wages being advanced to such an extraordinary height,
-that they are likely ere long to be masters and their
-masters servants, many poor husbandmen being forced
-to pay near as much to their servants for wages as to
-their landlords for rent.”<a id='r96' /><a href='#f96' class='c021'><sup>[96]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_57'>57</span>The holdings of the husbandmen varied from seven
-acres or more to half an acre or even less of garden
-ground, in which as potatoes<a id='r97' /><a href='#f97' class='c021'><sup>[97]</sup></a> were not yet grown in
-England the crop consisted of wheat, barley, rye, oats,
-or peas. Very likely there was a patch of hemp or
-flax and an apple-tree or two, a cherry tree and some
-elder-berries in the hedge, with a hive or two of bees
-in a warm corner. Common rights made it possible
-to keep sheep and pigs and poultry, and the possession
-of a cow definitely lifted the family above the poverty
-line.</p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Dorothy Osborne describing her own day to her
-lover, gives an idyllic picture of the maidens tending
-cows on the common: “The heat of the day is spent
-in reading or working, and about six or seven o’clock
-I walk out into a common that lies hard by the house,
-where a great many young wenches keep sheep and
-cows, and sit in the shade singing of ballads. I go to
-them and compare their voices and beauties to some
-ancient shepherdesses that I have read of, and find a
-vast difference there; but trust me, I think these are
-as innocent as those could be. I talk to them and find
-they want nothing to make them the happiest people
-in the world but the knowledge that they are so. Most
-commonly, when we are in the midst of our discourse,
-one looks about her, and spies her cows going into the
-corn, and then away they all run as if they had wings
-at their heels. I, that am not so nimble, stay behind,
-and when I see them driving home their cattle, I
-think ’tis time for me to retire too.”<a id='r98' /><a href='#f98' class='c021'><sup>[98]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Husbandmen have been defined as a class who
-could not subsist entirely upon their holdings, but
-must to some extent work for wages. Their need for
-wages varied according to the size of their holding
-and according to the rent. For copy-holders the rent
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_58'>58</span>was usually nominal,<a id='r99' /><a href='#f99' class='c021'><sup>[99]</sup></a> but in other cases the
-husbandman was often forced to pay what was
-virtually a rack rent. Few other money payments
-were necessary and if the holding was large enough
-to produce sufficient food, the family had little cause
-to fear want.</p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Randall Taylor wrote complacently in 1689 that in
-comparison with the French peasants, “Our <i>English</i>
-husbandmen are both better fed and taught, and the
-poorest people here have so much of brown Bread,
-and the Gospel, that by the Calculations of our <i>Bills</i>
-of <i>Mortality</i> it appears, that for so many years past
-but One of Four Thousand is starved.”<a id='r100' /><a href='#f100' class='c021'><sup>[100]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The woman of the husbandman class was muscular
-and well nourished. Probably she had passed her
-girlhood in service on a farm, where hard work, largely
-in the open air, had sharpened her appetite for the
-abundant diet which characterised the English
-farmer’s housekeeping. After marriage, much of her
-work was still out of doors, cultivating her garden and
-tending pigs or cows, while her husband did his day’s
-work on neighbouring farms. Frugal and to the last
-degree laborious were her days, but food was still
-sufficient and her strength enabled her to bear healthy
-children and to suckle them. It was exactly this
-class of woman that the gentry chose as wet nurses
-for their babies. Their lives would seem incredibly
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_59'>59</span>hard to the modern suburban woman, but they had
-their reward in the respect and love of their families
-and in the sense of duties worthily fulfilled.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The more prosperous husbandmen often added to
-their households an apprentice child, but in other cases
-the holdings were too small to occupy even the family’s
-whole time.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>At harvest in any case all the population of the
-village turned out to work; men, women, and children,
-not only those belonging to the class of husbandmen,
-but the tradesmen as well, did their bit in a work so
-urgent; for in those days each district depended
-on its own supply of corn, there being scarcely any
-means of transport.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Except during the harvest, wages were so low that a
-man who had a holding of his own was little tempted
-to work for them, though he might undertake some
-special and better-paid occupation, such as that of a
-shepherd. Pepys, describing a visit to Epsom, writes:
-“We found a shepherd and his little boy reading, far
-from any houses or sight of people, the Bible to him,
-I find he had been a servant in my Cozen Pepys’s
-house ... the most like one of the old patriarchs
-that ever I saw in my life ... he values his dog
-mightily, ... about eighteen score sheep in his
-flock, he hath four shillings a week the year round
-for keeping of them.”<a id='r101' /><a href='#f101' class='c021'><sup>[101]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Probably this picturesque shepherd belonged to the
-class of husbandmen, for the wages paid are higher
-than those of a household servant. Four shillings a
-week comes to £10.8.0 by the year, whereas a Wiltshire
-wages assessment for 1685 provided that a servant
-who was a chief shepherd looking after 1,500 sheep or
-more was not to receive more than £5 by the year.<a id='r102' /><a href='#f102' class='c021'><sup>[102]</sup></a>
-On the other hand, four shillings a week would not
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_60'>60</span>maintain completely the shepherd, his boy and a dog,
-not to speak of a wife and other children. Thus,
-while the shepherd tended his sheep, we may
-imagine his wife and children were cultivating their
-allotment.</p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The wages for the harvest work of women as well as
-men, were fixed by the Quarter Sessions.<a id='r103' /><a href='#f103' class='c021'><sup>[103]</sup></a> References
-to their work may be found in account books and
-diaries. Thus Dame Nicholson notes: “<i>Aug. 13,
-1690</i>, I began to sher ye barin croft about 11 o’clock,
-ther was Gordi Bar and his wife—also Miler’s son
-James and his sister Margit also a wife called Nieton—they
-sher 17 threv and 7 chivis.”<a id='r104' /><a href='#f104' class='c021'><sup>[104]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Best gives a detailed account of the division of work
-between men and women on a Yorkshire farm: “Wee
-have allwayes one man, or else one of the ablest of the
-women, to abide on the mowe, besides those that goe
-with the waines.<a id='r105' /><a href='#f105' class='c021'><sup>[105]</sup></a> The best sort of men-shearers
-have usually 8<i>d.</i> a day and are to meate themselves;
-the best sorte of women shearers have (most commonly)
-6<i>d.</i> a day.<a id='r106' /><a href='#f106' class='c021'><sup>[106]</sup></a> It is usuall in some places (wheare
-the furres of the landes are deepe worne with raines)
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_61'>61</span>to imploy women, with wain-rakes, to gather the corne
-out of the said hollow furres after that the sweath-rakes
-have done.<a id='r107' /><a href='#f107' class='c021'><sup>[107]</sup></a> ... We use meanes allwayes to gett
-eyther 18 or else 24 pease pullers, which wee sette
-allways sixe on a lande, viz., a woman and a man, a
-woman and a man, a woman or boy and a man, etc.,
-the weakest couple in the fore furre ... it is usuall
-in most places after they gette all pease pulled, or the
-last graine downe, to invite all the worke-folkes and
-wives (that helped them that harvest) to supper, and
-then have they puddinges, bacon, or boyled beefe,
-flesh or apple pyes, and then creame brought in platters,
-and every one a spoone; then after all they have
-hotte cakes and ale; some will cutte theire cake
-and putte into the creame and this feaste is called the
-creame-potte or creame-kitte ... wee send
-allwayes, the daye before wee leade, [pease] two of our
-boys, or a boy and one of our mayds with each of them a
-shorte mowe forke to turn them.”<a id='r108' /><a href='#f108' class='c021'><sup>[108]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>For thatching, Best continues: “Wee usually provide
-two women for helpes in this kinde, <i>viz.</i>, one to drawe
-thacke, and the other to serve the thatcher; she that
-draweth thacke hath 3<i>d.</i> a day, and shee that serveth
-the thatcher 4<i>d.</i> a day, because shee also is to temper
-the morter, and to carry it up to the toppe of the
-howse.... Shee that draweth thatch shoulde
-always have dry wheate strawe ... whearewith
-to make her bandes for her bottles. She that serveth
-will usually carry up 4 bottles at a time, and sometimes
-but 3 if the thatch bee longe and very wette.”<a id='r109' /><a href='#f109' class='c021'><sup>[109]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_62'>62</span>“Spreaders of mucke and molehills are (for the
-most parte) women, boyes and girles, the bigger and
-abler sorte of which have usually 3<i>d.</i> a day, and the
-lesser sorte of them 2<i>d.</i> a day.”<a id='r110' /><a href='#f110' class='c021'><sup>[110]</sup></a> “Men that pull
-pease have 8<i>d.</i> women 6<i>d.</i> a day.”<a id='r111' /><a href='#f111' class='c021'><sup>[111]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>A picture of hay-harvesting in the West of England
-given by Celia Fiennes suggests that in other parts of
-England to which she was accustomed, the labour,
-especially that of women, was not quite so heavy.
-All over Devon and Cornwall she says, hay is carried
-on the horses’ backs and the people “are forced to
-support it wᵗʰ their hands, so to a horse they have
-two people, and the women leads and supports them,
-as well as yᵉ men and goe through thick and thinn....
-I wondred at their Labour in this kind, for
-the men and the women themselves toiled Like their
-horses.”<a id='r112' /><a href='#f112' class='c021'><sup>[112]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>There was hardly any kind of agricultural work from
-which women were excluded. Everenden “payed
-1<i>s.</i> 2<i>d.</i> to the wife of Geo. Baker for shearing 28 sheep.”<a id='r113' /><a href='#f113' class='c021'><sup>[113]</sup></a>
-In Norfolk the wages for a “woman clipper of sheepe”
-were assessed at 6<i>d.</i> per day with meat and drink, 1<i>s.</i>
-without, while a man clipper was paid 7<i>d.</i> and 14<i>d.</i>
-It is noteworthy that only 4<i>d.</i> per day was allowed in the
-same assessment for the diet of “women and such
-impotent persons that weed corn and other such like
-Laborers” and 2<i>d.</i> per day for their wages.<a id='r114' /><a href='#f114' class='c021'><sup>[114]</sup></a> Pepys
-on his visit to Stonehenge “gave the shepherd-woman,
-for leading our horses, 4<i>d.</i>,”<a id='r115' /><a href='#f115' class='c021'><sup>[115]</sup></a> while Foulis
-enters, “Jan. 25, 1699 to tonie to give ye women at
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_63'>63</span>restalrig for making good wailings of strae, 4<i>s.</i> (Scots
-money).”<a id='r116' /><a href='#f116' class='c021'><sup>[116]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>But the wives of husbandmen were not confined
-to agricultural work as is shown by many payments
-entered to them in account books:<a id='r117' /><a href='#f117' class='c021'><sup>[117]</sup></a> Thus the church
-wardens at Strood, in Kent, paid the widow Cable for
-washing the surplices 1<i>s.</i><a id='r118' /><a href='#f118' class='c021'><sup>[118]</sup></a>; and at Barnsley they gave
-“To Ricard Hodgaris wife for whipping dogs” (out
-of the Church) 2<i>s.</i><a id='r119' /><a href='#f119' class='c021'><sup>[119]</sup></a> while “Eustace Lowson of Salton
-(a carrier of lettres and a verie forward, wicked
-woman in that folly)” and Isabell her daughter are
-included in a Yorkshire list of recusants.<a id='r120' /><a href='#f120' class='c021'><sup>[120]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>No doubt the mother with young children brought
-them with her to the harvest field, where they played
-as safely through the long summer day as if they and she
-had been at home. But at other times she chose work
-which did not separate her from her children, spinning
-being her unfailing resource. It is difficult living in
-the age of machinery to imagine the labour which
-clothing a family by hand-spinning involved,
-though the hand-spun thread was durable and fashions
-did not change.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>In spite of the large demand the price paid
-was very low, but when not obliged to spin for sale,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_64'>64</span>time was well spent in spinning for the family.
-The flax or hemp grown on the allotment, was
-stored up for shirts and house-linen. If the husbandman
-had no sheep, the children gathered scraps of
-wool from the brambles on the common, and thus
-the only money cost of the stuff worn by the
-husbandman’s household was the price paid to the
-weaver.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The more prosperous the family, the less the mother
-went outside to work, but this did not mean, as under
-modern conditions, that her share in the productive
-life of the country was less. Her productive energy
-remained as great, but was directed into channels
-from which her family gained the whole profit. In
-her humble way she fed and clothed them, like the
-wise woman described by Solomon.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The more she was obliged to work for wages, the
-poorer was her family.</p>
-<h3 class='c032'>C. <i>Wage-earners.</i></h3>
-
-<p class='c029'>In some respects it is less difficult to visualise the
-lives of women in the wage-earning class than in the
-class of farmers and husbandmen. The narrowness
-of their circumstances and the fact that their destitution
-brought them continually under the notice
-of the magistrates at Quarter Sessions have preserved
-data in greater completeness from which to reconstruct
-the picture. Had this information been wanting
-such a reconstruction would have demanded no vivid
-imagination, because the results of the semi-starvation
-of mothers and small children are very
-similar whether it takes place in the seventeenth or
-the twentieth century; the circumstances of the
-wives of casual labourers and men who are out of work
-and “unemployable” in modern England may
-be taken as representing those of almost the whole
-wage-earning class in the seventeenth century.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The most important factors governing the lives of
-wage-earning women admit of no dispute. First
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_65'>65</span>among these was their income, for wage-earners have
-already been defined as the class of persons depending
-wholly upon wages for the support of their
-families.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Throughout the greater part of the seventeenth
-century the rate of wages was not left to be adjusted
-by the laws of supply and demand, but was regulated
-for each locality by the magistrates at Quarter Sessions.
-Assessments fixing the maximum rates were published
-annually and were supposed to vary according to the
-price of corn. Certainly they did vary from district
-to district according to the price of corn in that
-district, but they were not often changed from year to
-year.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Prosecutions of persons for offering and receiving
-wages in excess of the maximum rates frequently
-occurred in the North Riding of Yorkshire, but it is
-extremely rare to find a presentment for this in other
-Quarter Sessions. The Assessments were generally
-accepted as publishing a rate that public opinion
-considered fair towards master and man, and outside
-Yorkshire steps were seldom taken to prevent masters
-from paying more to valued servants. That upon the
-whole the Assessments represent the rate ordinarily
-paid can be shown by a comparison with entries in
-contemporary account books.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The Assessments deal largely with the wages of
-unmarried farm servants and with special wages for
-the seasons of harvest, intended for the occasional
-labour of husbandmen, but in addition there are
-generally rates quoted by the day for the common
-labourer in the summer and winter months. Even
-when meat and drink is supplied, the day-rates for
-these common labourers are higher than the wages
-paid to servants living in the house and are evidently
-intended for married men with families.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>In one Assessment different rates are expressly
-given for the married and unmarried who are doing
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_66'>66</span>the same work,<a id='r121' /><a href='#f121' class='c021'><sup>[121]</sup></a> a married miller receiving with his
-meat and drink, 4<i>d.</i> a day which after deducting
-holidays would amount to £500 by the year, while
-the unmarried miller has only 46<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i> and a pair of
-boots.</p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Assessments generally show a similar difference
-between the day wages of a common labourer and the
-wages of the best man-servant living in the house,
-and it may therefore be assumed that day labourers
-were generally married persons.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Day rates were only quoted for women on seasonal
-jobs, such as harvest and weeding. It was not expected
-that married women would work all the year round for
-wages, and almost all single women were employed as
-servants.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The average wage of the common agricultural
-labourer as assessed at Quarter Sessions was 3½<i>d.</i> per
-day in winter, and 4½<i>d.</i> per day in summer, in addition
-to his meat and drink. Actual wages paid confirm
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_67'>67</span>the truth of these figures, though it is not always
-clear whether the payments include meat and drink.<a id='r122' /><a href='#f122' class='c021'><sup>[122]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>If we accept the Assessments as representing the
-actual wages earned by the ordinary labourer we can
-estimate with approximate accuracy the total
-income of a labourer’s family, for we have defined the
-wage-earner as a person who depended wholly upon
-wages and excluded from this class families who possessed
-gardens. Taking a figure considerably higher
-than the one at which the Assessment averages work
-out, namely 5<i>d.</i> per day instead of 4<i>d.</i> per day, to be
-the actual earnings of a labouring man in addition
-to his meat and drink, and doubling that figure for the
-three months which include the hay and corn harvests,
-his average weekly earnings will amount to 3<i>s.</i> 2<i>d.</i>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_68'>68</span>Except in exceptional circumstances his wife’s earnings
-would not amount to more than 1<i>s.</i> a week and her
-meat and drink. The more young children there were,
-the less often could the wife work for wages, and when
-not doing so her food as well as the children’s must be
-paid for out of the family income.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>In a family with three small children it is unlikely
-that the mother’s earnings were more than what
-would balance days lost by the father for holidays
-or illness, and the cost of his food on Sundays, but
-allowing for a small margin we may assume that 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>
-was the weekly income of a labourer’s family, and that
-this sum must provide rent and clothing for the whole
-family and food for the mother and children.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>A careful investigation of the cost of living is
-necessary before we can test whether this amount was
-adequate for the family’s maintenance.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>There is no reason to suppose that a diet inferior
-to present standards could maintain efficiency in the
-seventeenth century. On the contrary, the English
-race at that time attributed their alleged superiority
-over other nations to a higher standard of living.<a id='r123' /><a href='#f123' class='c021'><sup>[123]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_69'>69</span>A comparison between the purchasing power of
-money in the seventeenth and twentieth centuries is
-unsatisfactory for our purpose, because the relative
-values of goods have changed so enormously. Thus,
-though rent, furniture and clothes were much cheaper
-in the seventeenth century, there was less difference in
-the price of food. Sixpence per day is often given
-in Assessments as the cost of a labourer’s meat
-and drink and this is not much below the amount
-spent per head on these items in wage-earners’
-families during the first decade of the twentieth
-century.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>One fact alone is almost sufficient to prove the
-inadequacy of a labourer’s wage for the maintenance
-of his family. His money wages seldom exceeded the
-estimated cost of his own meat and drink as supplied
-by the farmer, and yet these wages were to supply
-all the necessaries of life for his whole family. Some
-idea of the bare cost of living in a humble household
-may be gained by the rates fixed for pensions and by
-allowances made for Poor Relief. From these it
-appears that four shillings to five shillings a week was
-considered necessary for an adult’s maintenance.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The Cromwell family paid four shillings weekly “to
-the widd. Bottom for her bord.”<a id='r124' /><a href='#f124' class='c021'><sup>[124]</sup></a> Pensions for
-maimed soldiers and widows were fixed at four shillings
-per week “or else work to be provided which will
-make their income up to 4<i>s.</i> per week. Sick and
-wounded soldiers under cure for their wounds to
-have 4<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i> per week.”<a id='r125' /><a href='#f125' class='c021'><sup>[125]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_70'>70</span>The Justices in the North Riding of Yorkshire drew
-up a scale of reasonable prices for billeted soldiers by
-which each trooper was to pay for his own meat for
-each night—6d; dragoon, 4½<i>d</i>; foot soldier, 4<i>d.</i><a id='r126' /><a href='#f126' class='c021'><sup>[126]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Edward Malin, blacksmith, now fourscore
-and three past and his wife fourscore, wanting a
-quarter” very poor and unable “to gett anything
-whereby to live,” complained to the Hertfordshire
-Quarter Sessions that they receive only 1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> a week
-between them; “others have eighteen pence apiece
-single persons” and desire that an order be made for
-them to have 3<i>s.</i> together which is but the allowance
-made to other persons.<a id='r127' /><a href='#f127' class='c021'><sup>[127]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>In cases of Poor Relief where payments were
-generally intended to be supplementary to other
-sources of income, the grants to widows towards the
-maintenance of their children were often absurdly
-small; in Yorkshire, Parish officers were ordered
-to “provide convenient habitation for a poor
-woman as they shall think fit and pay her 4<i>d.</i>
-weekly for the maintenance of herself and child.”<a id='r128' /><a href='#f128' class='c021'><sup>[128]</sup></a>
-In another case to pay a very poor widow 6<i>d.</i> weekly
-for the maintenance of herself and her three children.<a id='r129' /><a href='#f129' class='c021'><sup>[129]</sup></a>
-The allowance of 12<i>d.</i> weekly to a woman and her
-small children was reduced to 6<i>d.</i>, “because the
-said woman is of able body, and other of her children are
-able to work.”<a id='r130' /><a href='#f130' class='c021'><sup>[130]</sup></a> On the other hand when an orphan
-child was given to strangers to bring up, amounts
-varying from 1<i>s.</i> to 5<i>s.</i> per week were paid for its
-maintenance.<a id='r131' /><a href='#f131' class='c021'><sup>[131]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_71'>71</span>Thus the amount paid by the Justices for maintaining
-one pauper child sometimes exceeded the
-total earnings of a labourer and his wife. Other
-pauper children were maintained in institutions.
-The girls at a particularly successful Industrial School
-in Bristol were given an excellent and abundant diet
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_72'>72</span>at a cost of 1<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i> per head per week.<a id='r132' /><a href='#f132' class='c021'><sup>[132]</sup></a> At Stepney,
-the poor were maintained at 2<i>s.</i> 10d or 3<i>s.</i> per week,
-including all incidental expenses, firing and lodging.
-At Strood in Kent, 2<i>s.</i> was paid for children boarded
-out in poor families, while the inmates of the workhouse
-at Hanstope, Bucks, were supposed not to cost the
-parish more than 1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> a week per head.<a id='r133' /><a href='#f133' class='c021'><sup>[133]</sup></a> At
-Reading it was agreed “that Clayton’s wief shall have
-xiiiii<i>d.</i> a weeke for every poore childe in the hospitall
-accomptinge each childe’s worke in parte of payment.”<a id='r134' /><a href='#f134' class='c021'><sup>[134]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>These and many other similar figures show that a
-child must have cost from 1<i>s.</i> to 1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> a week for food
-alone, the amount varying according to age. Above
-seven years of age, children began to contribute
-towards their own support, but they were not completely
-self-supporting before the age of thirteen or
-fourteen.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>According to the wages assessments, a woman’s
-diet was reckoned at a lower figure than a man’s,
-but whenever they are engaged on heavy work such
-as reaping corn or shearing sheep, 6<i>d.</i> or 8<i>d.</i> a day is
-allowed for their “meate and drinke.” On other work,
-such as weeding or spinning, where only 2<i>d.</i> a day is
-reckoned for wages, their food also is only estimated as
-costing 2<i>d.</i> to 4<i>d.</i> As in such cases they are classed with
-“other impotent persons” it must not be supposed
-that 2<i>d.</i> or 3<i>d.</i> represents the cost of the food needed
-by a young active woman; it may even have been
-prolonged semi-starvation that had reduced the
-woman to the level of impotency. Unfortunately,
-there is often a wide difference between the cost of
-what a woman actually eats and what is necessary to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_73'>73</span>maintain her in efficiency. Probably the woman
-who was doing ordinary work while pregnant or
-suckling a baby may have needed as much food as the
-woman who was reaping corn; but in the wage-earner’s
-family she certainly did not get it; thus
-when a writer<a id='r135' /><a href='#f135' class='c021'><sup>[135]</sup></a> alleges that a man’s diet costs 5<i>d.</i> a day
-and a woman’s 1<i>s.</i> 6d per week, his statement may be
-correct as to fact, though the babies have perished for
-want of nourishment and the mother has been reduced
-to invalidism.</p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Another writer gives 2<i>s.</i> as being sufficient to
-“keep a poor man or woman (with good husbandry)
-one whole week.”<a id='r136' /><a href='#f136' class='c021'><sup>[136]</sup></a> Certainly 2<i>s.</i> is the very lowest
-figure that can have sufficed to keep up the mother’s
-strength. The bare cost of food for a mother and
-three children must have amounted to at least 5<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>
-per week, but there were other necessaries to be provided
-from the scanty wages. The poorest family
-required some clothes, and though these may have been
-given by charitable persons, rent remained to be paid.
-Building was cheap. In Scotland, the “new house”
-with windows glazed with “ches losens” only cost
-£4 12<i>s.</i> 3<i>d.</i> to build, while a “cothouse” built for
-Liddas “the merchant” cost only £1 0 0;<a id='r137' /><a href='#f137' class='c021'><sup>[137]</sup></a> other
-cots were built for 4<i>s.</i>, 11<i>s.</i> 1d,, 5<i>s.</i> and 14<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i> These
-Scottish dwellings were mud hovels, but in England
-the labourers’ dwellings were not much better.</p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Celia Fiennes describes the houses at the Land’s End
-as being “poor Cottages, Like Barns to Look on, much
-Like those in Scotland, but to doe my own country
-its right yᵉ Inside of their Little Cottages are Clean and
-plaister’d and such as you might Comfortably Eat and
-drink in, and for curiosity sake I dranck there and met
-with very good bottled ale.”<a id='r138' /><a href='#f138' class='c021'><sup>[138]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_74'>74</span>In some places the labourers made themselves
-habitations on the waste, but this was strictly against
-the law, such houses being only allowed for the
-impotent poor.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Many fines are entered in Quarter Sessions Records
-for building houses without the necessary quantity
-of land. By 39 Eliz. churchwardens and overseers
-were ordered, for the relief of the impotent poor, to
-build convenient houses at the charges of the Parish,
-but only with the consent of the Lord of the Manor.
-43 Eliz. added that such buildings were not at any
-time after to be used for other inhabitants but only for
-the impotent poor, placed there by churchwardens
-and overseers.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The housing problem was so acute that many orders
-were made by the justices sanctioning or ordering the
-erection of these cottages. “Rob. Thompson of
-Brompton and Eliz. Thompson of Aymonderby
-widow, stand indicted for building a cottage in
-Aymonderby against the statute, etc., upon a piece of
-ground, parcell of the Rectorie of Appleton-on-the
-street, and in which the said Eliz. doth dwell by the
-permission of John Heslerton, fermour of the said
-Rectorie, and that the same was so erected for the
-habitation of the said Elizᵗʰ. being a poore old woman
-and otherwise destitute of harbour and succour ...
-ordered that the said cottage shall continue ...
-for the space of twelve yeares, if the said Elizᵗʰ. live
-so long, or that the said Heslerton’s lease do so long
-endure.”<a id='r139' /><a href='#f139' class='c021'><sup>[139]</sup></a> In another case, Nicholas Russell, the wife
-of Thomas Waterton, and Robert Arundell, were
-presented for erecting cottages upon the Lord’s waste ...
-at the suit of parishioners these cottages are
-allowed by Mr. Coningsby, lord of the manor.<a id='r140' /><a href='#f140' class='c021'><sup>[140]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>It was often necessary to compel unwilling overseers
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_75'>75</span>to build cottages for the impotent poor, and for
-widows. “A woman with three children prays leave
-for the erection of a cottage in East Bedwyn, she having
-no habitation, but depending upon alms; from lying
-in the street she was conveyed into the church where
-she remained some small time, but was then ejected by
-the parish.” The overseers are ordered to provide for
-her.<a id='r141' /><a href='#f141' class='c021'><sup>[141]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The overseers at Shipley were ordered to build a
-house on the waste there for Archelaus Braylsford, to
-contain “two chambers floored fit for lodgings” or in
-default 5<i>s.</i> a week. At the following sessions his house
-was further ordered to be “a convenient habitation
-12 feet high upon the side walls soe as to make 2
-convenient chambers.”<a id='r142' /><a href='#f142' class='c021'><sup>[142]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The housing problem however could not be settled
-by orders instructing the overseers to build cottages
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_76'>76</span>for the impotent poor alone. Petitions were received
-as often from able-bodied labourers and for them the
-law forbade the erection of a cottage without four
-acres of land attached. The magistrates had no
-power to compel the provision of the land and thus
-they were faced with the alternatives of breaking the
-law and sanctioning the erection of a landless cottage
-on the waste or else leaving the labourer’s family to
-lie under hedges. The following petitions illustrate
-the way in which this situation was faced:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>George Grinham, Norton-under-Hambton, “in
-ye behalfe of himselfe, his poore wife and famelye”
-begged for permission “for my building yᵉʳ, of a
-little poor house for ye comfort of my selfe, my poore
-wife and children betwixt those other 2 poore houses
-erected on the glebe ... being a towne borne
-childe yᵉʳ myselfe.”<a id='r143' /><a href='#f143' class='c021'><sup>[143]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Another from William Dench, “a very poor man
-and having a wife and seven children all born at
-Longdon,” who was destitute of any habitation, states
-that he was given by William Parsons of Longdon,
-yeoman, in charity, “a little sheep-cote which sheep
-cote petitioner, with the consent of the churchwardens
-and overseers converted to a dwelling. Afterwards
-he having no licence from Quarter Sessions,
-nor under the hands of the Lord of the Manor so to do,
-and the sheep-cote being on the yeoman’s freehold and
-not on the waste or common, contrary to Acts 43
-Eliz. c. 2 and 31 Eliz. c. 7 he was indicted upon the
-Statute against cottages and sued to an outlawry. He
-prays the benefit of the King’s pardon and for licence
-in open session for continuance of his habitation.”<a id='r144' /><a href='#f144' class='c021'><sup>[144]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Eliz. Shepperd of Windley alleged she “was in
-possession of a Certayne cottage situate in Chevin,
-which was pulled downe and taken away by the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_77'>77</span>Inhabitants of Dooeffield, shee left without habitation
-and hath soe Continued Twelve months at the least,
-shee being borne in Windley, and hath two small
-children” prayed the inhabitants should find her a
-homestead—the case was adjourned because the overseers
-raised a technical objection; that Eliz. Shepherd
-was married, &amp; a woman’s petition could only proceed
-from a spinster or widow—meanwhile another child
-was born, and at the Michaelmas Sessions a joint
-petition was presented by Ralph Shepherd and Eliz.
-his wife, with the result that “the overseers are
-to find him habitation or show cause.”<a id='r145' /><a href='#f145' class='c021'><sup>[145]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Joseph Lange of Queene Camell “being an honest
-poore laborer and havinge a wife and 2 smale
-Children” prayed that he “might haue libertie to
-erect a Cottage uppon a wast ground”....
-This was assented to “for the habitacon of himselfe
-for his wife and afterwards the same shall be converted
-to the use of such other poore people etc.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Order that Robert Morris of Overstowey, husbandman,
-a very poor man having a wife and children, and no
-place of habitation “soe that hee is like to fall into
-greate misery for want thereof” may erect and build
-him a cottage on some part of the “wast” of the manor
-of Overstowey ... (subject to the approbation
-of the Lord of the said Manor).<a id='r146' /><a href='#f146' class='c021'><sup>[146]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The predicament of married labourers is shown
-again in the following report to the Hertfordshire
-Quarterly Sessions: “John Hawkins hath erected a
-cottage on the waste of my mannour of Benington,
-in consideration of the great charge of his wife and
-children that the said Hawkins is to provide for, I
-do hereby grant and give leave to him to continue the
-said cottage during his life and good behaviour.”<a id='r147' /><a href='#f147' class='c021'><sup>[147]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_78'>78</span>Labourers naturally were unwilling to hire cottages
-while there was a possibility of inducing the justices to
-provide one on the waste rent free. The churchwardens
-of Great Wymondley forwarded a certificate
-stating “that the poor people of the said parish that are
-old and not able to work are all provided for and none
-of the poor people of the said parish have been driven
-to wander into other unions to beg or ask relief, for this
-thirty years last past. This Nathaniel Thrussel,
-which now complains, is a lusty young man, able to
-work and always brought up to husbandry, his wife,
-a young woman, always brought up to work, and know
-both how to perform their work they are hired to
-do, and have at present but one child, but did not care
-to pay rent for a hired house when he had one nor
-endeavour to hire a house for himself when he wants.”<a id='r148' /><a href='#f148' class='c021'><sup>[148]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The scarcity of cottages resulted in extortionate
-rents for those that existed; Best noted that in his
-district “Mary Goodale and Richard Miller have a
-cottage betwixt them; Mary Goodale hath two roomes,
-and the orchard and payeth 6<i>s.</i> per annum; and
-Richard Miller, hayth one roomestead and payeth 4<i>s.</i>
-per annum.... They usually lette their cottages
-hereaboutes, for 10<i>s.</i> a piece, although they have not
-soe much as a yard, or any backe side belonging to
-them.”<a id='r149' /><a href='#f149' class='c021'><sup>[149]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The rents paid elsewhere are shown in the returns
-made in 1635 by the Justices of the Peace for the
-Hundreds of Blofield and Walsham in Norfolk concerning
-cottages and inmates:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Thos. Waters hath 3 inmates:</p>
-<div class='lg-container-l c033'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Wm. Wyley pays £1. per annum</div>
- <div class='line'>Anthony Smith pays £1. per annum</div>
- <div class='line'>Roger Goat pays 12<i>s.</i> per annum</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c024'>“which are all poore labourers and have wifes and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_79'>79</span>severall children and if they be put out cannot be
-provided in this towne and by reason of their charge
-and poverty are not likely to be taken elsewhere.”</p>
-<p class='c013'>“Wm. Browne hath 2 inmates:</p>
-<div class='lg-container-l c033'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Edmund Pitt 14<i>s.</i> per annum</div>
- <div class='line'>Wm. Jostling 14<i>s.</i> per annum</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c024'>that are very poor and impotent and take colleccion.</p>
-<p class='c013'>Wm. Reynoldes hath 2 inmates:</p>
-<div class='lg-container-l c033'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Anthony Durrant £1 16<i>s.</i> per annum</div>
- <div class='line'>Wm. Yurely 16<i>s.</i> per annum</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c024'>both are very poore labourers and have wifes and small
-children. Jas. Candle owner of a cottage [has] Robert
-Fenn, 13<i>s.</i> a poore man. Anne Linckhorne 1 inmate
-Philip Blunt that pay £1. 17. 0 that is a poore man and
-hath wife and children.”<a id='r150' /><a href='#f150' class='c021'><sup>[150]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Thus it appears that while a labourer who obtained
-a cottage on the waste lived rent free, twenty or
-thirty shillings might be demanded from those who
-were less fortunate.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Whatever money was extorted for rent meant
-so much less food for the mother and children, for it
-has been shown that the family income was insufficient
-for food alone, and left no margin for rent or
-clothes.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The relation of wages to the cost of living is seldom
-alluded to by contemporary writers, but a pamphlet
-published in 1706 says of a labourer’s family, “a poor
-Man and his Wife may have 4 or 5 children, 2 of them
-able to work, and 3 not able, and the Father and Mother
-not able to maintain themselves and Families in
-Meat, Drink, Cloaths and House Rent under 10<i>s.</i>
-a week.”<a id='r151' /><a href='#f151' class='c021'><sup>[151]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>A similar statement is made by Sir Matthew Hale,
-who adds “and so much they might probably get if
-employed.”<a id='r152' /><a href='#f152' class='c021'><sup>[152]</sup></a> But no evidence has been found from
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_80'>80</span>which we can imagine that an agricultural labourer’s
-family could possibly earn as much as 10<i>s.</i> a week in the
-seventeenth century. Our lower estimate is confirmed
-by a report made by the Justices of the Peace for the
-half hundred of Hitching concerning the poor in their
-district; “when they have worke the wages geven them
-is soe small that it hardlye sufficeth to buy the poore
-man and his familye breed, for they pay 6<i>s.</i> for one
-bushell of mycelyn grayne and receive but 8<i>d.</i> for their
-days work. It is not possible to procure mayntenance
-for all these poore people and their famylyes by almes
-nor yet by taxes.”<a id='r153' /><a href='#f153' class='c021'><sup>[153]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The insolvency of the wage-earning class is recognized
-by Gregory King in his calculations of the income
-and expense of the several Families of England, for
-the year 1680. All other classes, including artisans
-and handicrafts show a balance of income over expenditure
-but the families of seamen, labourers and soldiers
-show an actual yearly deficit.<a id='r154' /><a href='#f154' class='c021'><sup>[154]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>A still more convincing proof of the universal
-destitution of wage-earners is shown in the efforts made
-by churchwardens and overseers in every county
-throughout England to prevent the settlement within
-the borders of their parish of families which depended
-solely on wages.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Their objection is not based generally upon the
-ground that the labourer or his wife were infirm, or
-idle, or vicious; they merely state that the family is
-likely to become chargeable to the parish. Each
-parish was responsible for the maintenance of its own
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_81'>81</span>poor, and thus though farmers might be needing more
-labourers, the parish would not tolerate the settlement
-of families which could not be self-supporting.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The disputes which arose concerning these settlements
-contain many pitiful stories.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Anthony addams” tells the justices that he was
-born in Stockton and bred up in the same Parish, most
-of his time in service and has “taken great pains for
-my living all my time since I was able and of late I fortuned
-to marry with an honest young woman, and
-my parishioners not willing I should bring her in the
-parish, saying we should breed a charge amongst them.
-Then I took a house in Bewdley and there my wife
-doth yet dwell and I myself do work in Stockton
-... and send or bring my wife the best relief I am
-able, and now the parish of Bewdley will not suffer
-her to dwell there for doubt of further charge....
-I most humbly crave your good aid and help in this
-my distress or else my poor wife and child are like to
-perish without the doors: ... that by your good
-help and order to the parish of Stockton I may have a
-house there to bring my wife &amp; child unto that may
-help them the best I can.”<a id='r155' /><a href='#f155' class='c021'><sup>[155]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Another petition was brought by Josias Stone of
-Kilmington ... “shewinge that he hath binn
-an Inhabitant and yet is in Kilmington aforesaid
-and hath there continued to and fro these five yeares
-past and hath donn service for the said parishe and
-hath lately married a wife in the said parish intendinge
-there to liue and reside yet since his marriage is by the
-said parishe debarred of any abidinge for him and his
-said wife there in any howse or lodginge for his mony.”<a id='r156' /><a href='#f156' class='c021'><sup>[156]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Another dispute occurred over the case of Zachary
-Wannell and his wife who came lately from Wilton
-“into the towne of Taunton where they haue been
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_82'>82</span>denyed a residence and they ly upp and downe in
-barnes and hay lofts, the said Wannell’s wife being
-great with child; the said Wannell and his wife to be
-forthwith set to Wilton and there to continue until the
-next General Sessions. The being of the said Wannell
-and his wife at Wilton not to be interpreted as a settlement
-of them there.”<a id='r157' /><a href='#f157' class='c021'><sup>[157]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>There were endless examples of these conflicts often
-attended as in the above case with great cruelty.<a id='r158' /><a href='#f158' class='c021'><sup>[158]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_83'>83</span>The Justices were shocked at the consequent
-demoralization and generally supported the demands
-of the labourers as regards their settlement and
-housing. One writes to the clerk of the Peace:
-“I have sent you enclosed the recognizance of William
-Worster and William Smith, of Bovindon, for contempt
-of an order of sessions ... in the behalfe of one,
-John Yorke, formerly a vagrant, but now parishionir
-of Bovingdon. Yet I believe the rest of the inhabitants
-will doe their utmost to gett him thence though
-they force him to turn vagrant againe. Yorke will be
-with you to prove that he was in the parish halfe-a-year
-or more before they gave him any disturbance,
-and that not privately, for he worked for severall
-substantiall men and was at church, and paid rent.”<a id='r159' /><a href='#f159' class='c021'><sup>[159]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>But the Justices never suspected that the rate of wages
-which they themselves had fixed below subsistence level
-was at the root of the settlement difficulty. The overseers
-believed that all the troubles might be solved if only
-young people would not marry imprudently, and they
-petitioned the Justices begging that overseers of
-parishes might not be compelled to provide houses
-for such young persons “as will marry before they
-have provided themselves with a settling.”<a id='r160' /><a href='#f160' class='c021'><sup>[160]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>While the overseers were seeking to exclude all wage
-earners from the parish, individual farmers, perchance
-the overseers themselves wanted more labourers. To
-meet this difficulty, the overseers discovered an ingenious
-device. Before granting a settlement, they required
-the labourer to find sureties to save the parish harmless
-from his becoming chargeable to it. Obviously a
-labourer could not himself find sureties, but the farmer
-who wished to employ him was in a position to do
-so, and thus the responsibility for the wage-earner’s
-family would be laid upon the person who profited
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_84'>84</span>by his services. Petitions against this demand for
-sureties came before the Quarter Sessions. One from
-Robert Vawter stated that he was “a poore Day
-labourer about a quarter of a yere sithence came into
-the said parish of Clutton, and there marryed with a
-poore Almesmans Daughter, now liveing with her said
-father in the Almeshouse of Clutton aforesaid, and
-would there settle himselfe with his said wife.” He
-was ordered to find sureties or to go to gaol.<a id='r161' /><a href='#f161' class='c021'><sup>[161]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>It was reported at Salford “Whereas Rich.
-Hudson is come lately into the towne with his wife
-and ffoure children to Remaine that the Burrow-reeve
-and Constables of this towne shall give notice
-unto Henry Wrigley, Esq., upon whose land he still
-remaynes that hee remove him and his wife and children
-out of this Towne within this moneth unlesse
-hee give sufficient security upon the paine of ffive
-pounds.”<a id='r162' /><a href='#f162' class='c021'><sup>[162]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Similar orders were made re Nathan Cauliffe, his
-wife and three children, Robert Billingham with wife
-and two children, Peter ffarrant and his wife, &amp; Roger
-Marland and wife. Later the record continues, “and
-yet the said parties are not removed” order was
-therefore made “that this order shalbee put in
-execution.”<a id='r163' /><a href='#f163' class='c021'><sup>[163]</sup></a> Another step in the proceedings is
-recorded in the entry, “Whereas James Moores, George
-Moores and Adam Warmeingham stand bound unto
-Henry Wrigling Esq. in £20 for the secureinge the
-Towne from any poverty or disability which should or
-might befall unto the said James, his wife, children, or
-family or any of them. And whereas it appeares that
-the said James Moores hath been Chargeable whereby
-the said bond is become forfeit yet this Jury doth give
-the said George Moores and Adam Warmeingham this
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_85'>85</span>libtie that the said James shall remove out of this towne
-before the next Court Leet.”<a id='r164' /><a href='#f164' class='c021'><sup>[164]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Fines were exacted from those who harboured
-unfortunate strangers without having first given
-security for them, and no exception was made on the
-score of relationship. James Meeke of Myddleton was
-presented “for keeping of his daughter Ellen Meeke,
-having a husband dwelling in another place, and having
-two children borne forth of the parishe.”<a id='r165' /><a href='#f165' class='c021'><sup>[165]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Rules made at Steeple Ashton by the Churchwardens
-declare: “There hath much povertie happened unto
-this p’ish by receiving of strangers to inhabit there
-and not first securing them ag’st such contingencies
-and avoyding the like occasions in tyme to come,
-It is ordered by this vestrie that ev’ry p’son or p’sons
-whatsoev’r w’ch shall lett or sett any houseinge or
-dwellinge to any stranger and shall not first give good
-securite for defending and saving harmeless the said
-inhabitants from the future charge as may happen
-by such stranger comeing to inhabite w’thin the said
-p’ish and if any p’son shall doe to the contrary Its
-agreed that such p’son soe receiving such stranger shal
-be rated to the poor to 20<i>s.</i> monethlie over and above
-his monethlie tax.”<a id='r166' /><a href='#f166' class='c021'><sup>[166]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The penalties at Reading were higher. “At this
-daye Wm. Porter, th’elder was questioned for harboringe
-a straunger woman, and a childe, vizᵗ, the wief of
-John Taplyn; he worketh at Mr. Ed. Blagrave’s
-in Early: Confesseth. The woman saith she hath
-byn there ever syns Michaellmas last, and payed rent
-to goodman Porter, xxs a yeare; her kinsman Faringdon
-did take the house for them. Wm. Porter was
-required to paye xs a weeke accordinge to the orders
-and was willed to ridd his tenant with all speed upon
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_86'>86</span>payne of xs a weeke and to provide suretyes to discharge
-the towne of the childe.”<a id='r167' /><a href='#f167' class='c021'><sup>[167]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The starvation and misery described in Quarter
-Sessions Records were not exceptional calamities, but
-represent the ordinary life of women in the wage
-earning class. The lives of men were drab and
-monotonous, lacking pleasure and consumed by
-unending toil, but they did not often suffer hunger.
-The labourer while employed was well fed, for the
-farmer did not grudge him food, though he did not
-wish to feed his family. There was seldom want of
-employment for agricultural labourers, and when
-their homes sank into depths of wretchedness and the
-wife’s attractiveness was lost through slow starvation,
-the men could depart and begin life anew elsewhere.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The full misery of the labourer’s lot was only felt
-by the women; if unencumbered they could have
-returned, like the men, to the comfortable conditions
-of service, but the cases of mothers who deserted their
-children are rare.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The hardships suffered by the women of the wage-earning
-class proved fatal to their children. Gregory
-King estimated that there were on an average only 3½
-persons, including father and mother in a labourer’s
-family though he gives 4.8 as the average number of
-children for each family in villages and hamlets.<a id='r168' /><a href='#f168' class='c021'><sup>[168]</sup></a>
-Another writer gives 3 persons as the average
-number for a labourer’s family.<a id='r169' /><a href='#f169' class='c021'><sup>[169]</sup></a> The cases of disputed
-settlements which are brought before Quarter Sessions
-confirm the substantial truth of these estimates. It
-is remarkable that where the father is living seldom
-more than two or three children are mentioned, often
-only one, though in cases of widows where the poverty
-is recent and caused as it were by the accidental effect of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_87'>87</span>the husband’s premature death, there are often five to
-ten children. In Nottingham, of seventeen families,
-who had recently come to the town and been taken in
-as tenants, and which the Council wanted to eject
-for fear of overcrowding, only one had four children,
-one three, and the rest only two or one child apiece.<a id='r170' /><a href='#f170' class='c021'><sup>[170]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>In fact, however large the birth-rate may have been,
-and this we have no means of ascertaining, few children
-in the wage-earning class were reared. Of those who
-reached maturity, many were crippled in mind or
-body, forming a large class of unemployables destined
-to be a burthen instead of strength to the community.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>This appalling loss and suffering was not due to the
-excessive work of married women but to their under-feeding
-and bad housing. Probably the women
-of the wage-earning class actually accomplished less
-work than the women of the husbandman class; but
-the latter worked under better conditions and were
-well nourished, with the result that their sons and
-daughters have been the backbone of the English
-nation.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The sacrifice of the wage-earners’ children was
-caused by the mother’s starvation; vainly she gave
-her own food to the children for then she was unable
-to suckle the baby and grew too feeble for her former
-work. Probably she had herself been the daughter
-of a husbandman and was inured to labour from child
-hood. “Sent abroad into service and hardship when
-but 10 years old” as Oliver Heywood wrote of a
-faithful servant, she met the chances which decide
-a servant’s life. The work on farms was rough, but
-generally healthy. At first the child herded the pigs
-or the geese and followed the harrow and as she
-grew older the poultry yard and the cows divided her
-attention with the housework. Sometimes she was
-brutally treated and often received little training in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_88'>88</span>her work, but generosity in meat and drink has always
-been characteristic of the English farmer, and during
-the hungry years of adolescence the average girl who
-was a servant in husbandry was amply nourished. Then
-came marriage. The more provident waited long in
-the hope of securing independence, and one of those
-desirable cottages with four acres of land, but to
-some the prospect seemed endless and at last they
-married hoping something would turn up; or perhaps
-they were carried away by natural impulses and
-married young without any thought for the future.
-Such folly was the despair of Churchwardens and
-Overseers, yet the folly need not seem so surprising
-when we consider that delay brought the young
-people no assurance of improvement in their position.
-Church and State alike taught that it was the duty
-of men and women to marry and bring forth children,
-and if for a large class the organisation of Society
-made it impossible for them to rear their children,
-who is to blame for the fate of those children, their
-parents or the community?</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>After one of these imprudent marriages the husband
-sometimes continued to work on a farm as a servant,
-visiting his wife and children on Sundays and holidays.
-By this means he, at least, was well fed and well
-housed. The woman with a baby to care for and
-feed, could not leave her home every day to work and
-must share the children’s food. In consequence
-she soon began to practise starvation. Her settlement
-was disputed, and therefore her dwelling was
-precarious. Nominally she was transferred on marriage
-to the parish where her husband was bound as servant
-for the term of one year, but the parish objected to
-the settlement of a married man lest his children
-became a burden on them.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>No one doubted that it was somebody’s duty to
-care for the poor, but arrangements for relief were
-strictly parochial and the fear of incurring unlimited
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_89'>89</span>future responsibilities led English parishioners to
-strange lengths of cruelty and callousness. The fact
-that a woman was soon to have a baby, instead of
-appealing to their chivalry, seemed to them the best
-reason for turning her out of her house and driving her
-from the village, even when a hedge was her only
-refuge.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The once lusty young woman who had formerly done
-a hard day’s work with the men at harvesting was
-broken by this life. It is said of an army that it fights
-upon its stomach. These women faced the grim
-battle of life, laden with the heavy burden of child-bearing,
-seldom knowing what it meant to have
-enough to eat. Is it surprising that courage often
-failed and they sank into the spiritless, dismal ranks
-of miserable beings met in the pages of Quarter Sessions
-Records, who are constantly being forwarded from
-one parish to another.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Such women, enfeebled in mind and body, could not
-hope to earn more than the twopence a day and their
-food which is assessed as the maximum rate for women
-workers in the hay harvest. On the contrary, judging
-from the account books of the period, they often
-received only one penny a day for their labour. Significant
-of their feebleness is the Norfolk assessment
-which reads, “Women and such impotent persons
-that weed corne, or other such like Labourers 2d with
-meate and drinke, 6d without.”<a id='r171' /><a href='#f171' class='c021'><sup>[171]</sup></a> Such wages may
-have sufficed for the infirm and old, but they meant
-starvation for the woman with a young family depending
-on her for food. And what chance of health and
-virtue existed for the children of these enfeebled
-starving women?</p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>On the death or desertion of her husband the
-labouring woman became wholly dependent on the
-Parish for support.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_90'>90</span>The conduct of the magistrates in fixing maximum
-wages at a rate which they knew to be below subsistence
-level seems inexplicable; is in fact inexplicable
-until it is understood that these wages were never
-intended to be sufficient for the support of a family.
-Statute 31 Eliz. and others, show that the whole
-influence of the Government and administration was
-directed to prevent the creation of a class of wage-earners.
-It was an essential feature of Tudor policy to foster
-the Yeomanry, from whose ranks were recruited the
-defenders of the realm. Husbandmen were recognised
-as “the body and stay” of the kingdom.<a id='r172' /><a href='#f172' class='c021'><sup>[172]</sup></a> They
-made the best infantry when bred “not in a servile
-or indigent fashion, but in some free and plentiful
-manner.”<a id='r173' /><a href='#f173' class='c021'><sup>[173]</sup></a> If the depopulation of the country-side
-went on unchecked, there would come to pass “a
-mere sollitude and vtter desolation to the whole Realme,
-furnished only with shepe and shepherdes instead of
-good men; wheareby it might be a prey to oure
-enymies that first would sett vppon it.”<a id='r174' /><a href='#f174' class='c021'><sup>[174]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Probably the consideration of whether a family
-could be fed by a labourer’s wage, seldom entered the
-Justices’ heads. They wished the family to win its
-food from a croft and regarded the wages as merely
-supplementary. The Justices would like to have
-exterminated wage-earners, who were an undesirable
-class in the community, and they might have succeeded
-as the conditions imposed upon the women made
-the rearing of children almost impossible, had not
-economic forces constantly recruited the ranks of
-wage-earners from the class above them.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The demands of capital however for labour already
-exceeded the supply available from the ranks of
-husbandmen, and could only be met by the establishment
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_91'>91</span>of a class of persons depending wholly on wages.
-The strangest feature of the situation was the fact that
-the magistrates who were trying to exterminate wage-earners
-were often themselves capitalists creating the
-demand.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The actual proportion of wage-earners in the
-seventeenth century can only be guessed at. The
-statement of a contemporary<a id='r175' /><a href='#f175' class='c021'><sup>[175]</sup></a> that Labourers and
-Cottagers numbered 2,000,000 persons, out of a population
-of only 5,000,000 must be regarded as an
-exaggeration; in any case their distribution was uneven.</p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Complaints are not infrequently brought before
-Quarter Sessions from parishes which say they are
-burdened with so great a charge of poor that they cannot
-support it; to other parishes the Justices are sometimes
-driven to issue orders on the lines of a warrant
-commanding “the Churchwardens of the townes of
-Screwton and Aynderby to be more diligent in relieving
-their poore, that the court be not troubled with any
-further claymours therein.”<a id='r176' /><a href='#f176' class='c021'><sup>[176]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>On the other hand there were many districts where
-the wage-earner was hardly known and the authorities,
-like the Tithing men of Fisherton Delamere could
-report that they “have (thanks to the Almighty God
-theirfor) no popish recusants; no occasion to levy
-twelvepence, for none for bear to repair to divine service;
-no inns or alehouses licensed or unlicensed, no drunken
-person, no unlawful weights or measures, no neglect of
-hues and cries, no roads out of repair, no wandering
-rogues or idle persons, and no inmates of whom they
-desire information.”<a id='r177' /><a href='#f177' class='c021'><sup>[177]</sup></a> Or the Constable of Tredington
-who declared that “the poor are weekly relieved, felons
-none known. Recusants one Bridget Lyne, the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_92'>92</span>wife of Thos. Lyne. Tobacco none planted. Vagrants
-Mary How, an Irish woman and her sister were taken
-and punished according to the Statute and sent away
-by pass with a guide towards Ireland in the County of
-Cork.”<a id='r178' /><a href='#f178' class='c021'><sup>[178]</sup></a> or as in another report “We have no bakers or
-alehouses within our parish. We cannot find by our
-searches at night or other time that any rogues or
-vagabonds are harboured saving Mr. Edward Hall who
-lodged a poor woman and her daughter. We do not
-suffer any vagrants which we see begging in our parish
-but we give them punishment according as we ought.”<a id='r179' /><a href='#f179' class='c021'><sup>[179]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>A review of the whole position of women in Agriculture
-at this time, shows the existence of Family
-Industry at its best, and of Capitalism at its worst.
-The smaller farmers and more prosperous husbandmen
-led a life of industry and independence in which every
-capacity of the women, mental, moral and physical
-had scope for development and in which they could
-secure the most favourable conditions for their children—while
-among capitalistic farmers a tendency can
-already be perceived for the women to withdraw from
-the management of business and devote themselves
-to pleasure. At the other end of the scale Capitalism
-fed the man whom it needed for the production of
-wealth but made no provision for his children; and
-the married woman, handicapped by her family ties,
-when she lost the economic position which enabled her
-through Family Industry to support herself and her
-children, became virtually a pauper.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c001' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_93'>93</span>
- <h2 class='c011'><span class='sc'>Chapter IV</span><br /> <br />TEXTILES.</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c034'>(A) <i>Introductory.</i> Historical importance in women’s economic
-development—Predominance of women’s labour—Significance in development
-of Industrialism—Low wages.</p>
-
-<p class='c035'>(B) <i>Woollen Trade.</i> Historical importance—Proportions of men and
-women employed—Early experiments in factory system abandoned—Declining
-employment of women in management and control—Women
-Weavers—Burling—Spinning—Organization of spinning industry—Women who
-bought wool and sold yarn made more profit than those who worked for
-wages—Methods of spinning—Class of women who span for wages—Rates of
-wages—Disputes between spinsters and employers—Demoralisation of
-seasons of depression—Association of men and women in trade disputes.</p>
-
-<p class='c035'>(C) <i>Linen.</i> Chiefly a domestic industry—Introduction of
-Capitalism—Increased demand caused by printing linens—Attempt to
-establish a company—Part taken by
-women—weaving—bleaching—spinning—Wages below subsistence
-level—Encouragement of spinning by local authorities to lessen poor
-relief—Firmin.</p>
-
-<p class='c035'>(D) <i>Silk.</i> <i>Gold and Silver.</i> Silk formerly a monopoly of
-gentlewomen—In seventeenth century virtually one of the pauper trades.
-Gold and Silver furnished employment to the poorest class of
-women—Factory system already in use.</p>
-
-<p class='c035'>(E) <i>Conclusion.</i></p>
-<p class='c012'><span class='sc'>From</span> the general economic standpoint, the textile
-industries rank second in importance to agriculture
-during the seventeenth century, but in the history of
-women’s economic development they hold a position
-which is quite unique. If the food supply of the
-country depended largely on the work of women in
-agriculture, their labour was absolutely indispensable
-to the textile industries, for in all ages and in all
-countries spinning has been a monopoly of women.
-This monopoly is so nearly universal that we may
-suspect some physiological inability on the part of
-men to spin a fine even thread at the requisite speed,
-and spinning forms the greater part of the labour in
-the production of hand-made textile fabrics.</p>
-<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_94'>94</span>It requires some effort of the imagination in this
-mechanical age to realize the incessant industry which
-the duty of clothing her own family imposed on every
-woman, to say nothing of the yarn required for the
-famous Woollen Trade. The service rendered by
-women in spinning for the community was compared
-by contemporaries to the service rendered by the
-men who ploughed. “Like men that would lay no
-hand to the plough, and women that would set no
-hand to the wheele, deserving the censure of wise
-Solomon, Hee that would not labour should not eat.”<a id='r180' /><a href='#f180' class='c021'><sup>[180]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Textile industries fall into three groups: Woollen,
-Linen, and Miscellaneous, comprising silk, etc. Cotton
-is seldom mentioned although imported at this time
-in small quantities for mixture with linen.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The predominance of women’s labour in the textile
-trades makes their history specially significant in
-tracing the evolution of women’s industrial position
-under the influences of capitalism; for the woollen
-trade was one of the first fields in which capitalistic
-organization achieved conspicuous success.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The importance of the woollen trade as a source of
-revenue to the Crown drew to it so much attention that
-many details have been preserved concerning its
-development; showing with a greater distinctness
-than in other and more obscure trades, the steps by
-which Capitalistic Organization ousted Family Industry
-and the Domestic Arts. It is surely not altogether
-accidental that Industrialism developed so remarkably
-in two trades where the labour of women predominated—in
-the woollen trade which in the seventeenth
-century was already organized on capitalistic lines, and,
-one hundred years later, in the cotton trade.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Some characteristic features of modern Industrialism
-were absent from the woollen trade in the seventeenth
-century. The work of men and women alike was carried
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_95'>95</span>on chiefly at home, and thus the employment of married
-women and children was unimpeded; nor are there any
-signs of industrial jealousy between men and women,
-who on the contrary, stand by each other during this
-period in all trade disputes. Nevertheless, the position
-of the woman wage-earner in the textile trades was
-extraordinarily bad, and this in spite of the fact that
-the demand for her labour appears nearly always to
-have exceeded the supply. The evidence contained in
-the following chapter shows that the wages paid to
-women in the seventeenth century for spinning linen
-were insufficient, and those paid for spinning wool,
-barely sufficient, for their individual maintenance, and
-yet out of them women were expected to support, or
-partly support, their children.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Possibly the persistence of such low wages throughout
-the country was due in a measure to the convenience
-of spinning as a tertiary occupation for married
-women. She who was employed by day in the intervals
-of household duties with her husband’s business
-or her dairy and garden, could spin through the long
-winter evenings when the light was too bad for other
-work. The mechanical character of the movements,
-and the small demand they make on eye or thought,
-renders spinning wonderfully adapted to women whose
-serious attention is engrossed by the care or training
-of their children. A comparison of spinster’s wages
-with those of agricultural labourers, which were also
-below subsistence level, will show however that such
-an explanation does not altogether meet the case.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The fact is that far from underselling the spinsters<a id='r181' /><a href='#f181' class='c021'><sup>[181]</sup></a>
-who were wholly dependent on wages for their living,
-it seems probable that the women who only span for
-sale after the needs of their own households had been
-supplied, received the highest rates of pay, just as the
-husbandman, who only worked occasionally for wages,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_96'>96</span>was paid better than the labourer who worked for
-them all the year round, and whose family depended
-exclusively on him. Disorganization and lack of bargaining
-power, coupled with traditions founded upon
-an earlier social organization, were responsible for the
-low wages of the spinsters. The agricultural labourer
-was crippled in his individual efforts for a decent wage
-because society persisted in regarding him as a household
-servant. The spinster was handicapped because in a
-society which began to assert the individual’s right to
-freedom, she had from her infancy been trained to
-subjection.</p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>It must however be remembered that though a large
-part of the ensuing chapter is concerned with spinsters
-and their wages, much, perhaps most, of the thread
-spun never came into the market, but was produced for
-domestic consumption. Thus we find all three forms
-of industrial organisation existing simultaneously in
-these trades—Domestic Industry, Family Industry,
-and Capitalistic Industry.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Domestic Industry lingered especially in the Linen
-Trade until machinery made the spinning wheel
-obsolete, and Family Industry was still extensively
-practised in the seventeenth century; but Capitalistic
-Industry, already established in the Woollen Trade,
-was making rapid inroads on the other branches of the
-Textile Trades.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Although Capitalism undermined the position of
-considerable economic independence enjoyed by
-married women and widows in the tradesman and
-farming classes, possibly its introduction may have
-improved the position of unmarried women, and
-others who were already dependent on wages; but
-such improvements belong to a later date. Their
-only indication in the seventeenth century is the clearly
-proved fact that wages for spinning were higher in the
-more thoroughly capitalistic woollen trade, than in the
-linen trade. Further evidence is a suggestion by Defoe
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_97'>97</span>that wages for spinning in the woollen trade were
-doubled, or even trebled, in the first decade of the
-eighteenth century, but no sign of this advance can
-be detected in our period.</p>
-<h3 class='c032'>B. <i>Woollen Trade.</i></h3>
-
-<p class='c029'>The interest of the Government and of all those who
-studied financial and economic questions, was focussed
-upon the Woollen Trade, owing to the fact that it
-formed one of the chief sources of revenue for the
-Crown. At the close of the seventeenth century
-woollen goods formed a third of the English exports.<a id='r182' /><a href='#f182' class='c021'><sup>[182]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Historically the Woollen Trade has a further importance,
-due to the part which it played in the development
-of capitalism. The manufacture of woollen
-materials had existed in the remote past as a family
-industry, and even in the twentieth century this method
-still survives in the remoter parts of the British Isles;
-but the manufacture of cloth for Foreign trade was
-from its beginning organized on Capitalistic lines, and
-the copious records which have been preserved of its
-development, illustrate the history of Capitalism
-itself.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>It was estimated that about one million men, women
-and children were exclusively employed in the clothing
-trade,—“all have their dependence solely and wholly
-upon the said <i>Manufacture</i>, without intermixing
-themselves in the labours of <i>Hedging</i>, <i>Ditching</i>,
-<i>Quicksetting</i>, and others the works belonging to
-Husbandry.”<a id='r183' /><a href='#f183' class='c021'><sup>[183]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>In 1612 eight thousand persons, men, women and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_98'>98</span>children were said to be employed in the clothing
-trade in Tiverton alone.<a id='r184' /><a href='#f184' class='c021'><sup>[184]</sup></a> While giving 933,966 hands
-as the number properly employed in woollen manufacture,
-another writer says that women and children
-(girls and boys) were employed in the proportion of
-about eight to one man.<a id='r185' /><a href='#f185' class='c021'><sup>[185]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Such figures must be taken with reserve, for the
-proportions of men and women employed varied
-according to the quality of the stuff woven, and
-pamphleteers of the seventeenth century handled
-figures with little regard to scientific accuracy.<a id='r186' /><a href='#f186' class='c021'><sup>[186]</sup></a> But
-the uncertainty only refers to the exact proportion;
-there can be no doubt that the Woollen Trade depended
-chiefly upon women and children for its labour supply.</p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>For the student of social organization it is noteworthy
-that in the two textile trades through which
-capitalism made in England its most striking advances—the
-woollen trade, and in later years, the cotton
-trade, the labour of women predominated,—a fact
-which suggests obscure actions and reactions between
-capitalism and the economic position of women, worthy
-of more careful investigation than they have as yet
-received.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The woollen trade passed through a period of rapid
-progress and development in the sixteenth century. It
-was then that the Clothiers of Wiltshire and Somerset
-acquired wealth and fame, building as a memorial
-for posterity the Tudor houses and churches which
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_99'>99</span>still adorn these counties. Leland, writing of a typical
-clothier and his successful enterprises and ambitions,
-describes at Malmesbury, Wiltshire “a litle chirch
-joining to the South side of the <i>Transeptum</i> of thabby
-chirch, ... Wevers hath now lomes in this litle
-chirch, but it stondith ... the hole logginges
-of thabbay be now longging to one Stumpe, an exceding
-riche clothiar that boute them of the king. This
-Stumpes sunne hath maried Sir Edward Baynton’s
-doughter. This Stumpe was the chef causer and
-contributer to have thabbay chirch made a paroch
-chirch. At this present tyme every corner of the vaste
-houses of office that belongid to thabbay be fulle
-of lumbes to weve clooth yn, and this Stumpe entendith
-to make a stret or 2 for clothier in the bak vacant
-ground of the abbay that is withyn the toune waulles.”<a id='r187' /><a href='#f187' class='c021'><sup>[187]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>There must have been a marked tendency at this time
-to bring the wage-earners of the woollen industry
-under factory control, for a description which is given
-of John Winchcombe’s household says that</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c030'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Within one room being large and long</div>
- <div class='line in1'>There stood two hundred Looms full strong,</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Two hundred men the truth is so</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Wrought in these looms all in a row,</div>
- <div class='line in1'>By evry one a pretty boy</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Sate making quills with mickle joy.</div>
- <div class='line in1'>And in another place hard by,</div>
- <div class='line in1'>An hundred women merrily,</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Were carding hard with joyful cheer</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Who singing sate with voices clear.</div>
- <div class='line in1'>And in a chamber close beside,</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Two hundred maidens did abide,</div>
- <div class='line in1'>In petticoats of Stammell red,</div>
- <div class='line in1'>And milk-white kerchers on their head.”<a id='r188' /><a href='#f188' class='c021'><sup>[188]</sup></a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c029'>These experiments were discontinued, partly because
-they were discountenanced by the Government, which
-considered the factory system rendered the wage-earners
-too dependent on the clothiers; and also because
-the collection of large numbers of workpeople under one
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_100'>100</span>roof provided them with the opportunity for combination
-and insubordination.<a id='r189' /><a href='#f189' class='c021'><sup>[189]</sup></a> Moreover the factory
-system was not really advantageous to the manufacturer
-before the introduction of power, because he could
-pay lower wages to the women who worked at home
-than to those who left their families in order to work
-on his premises. Thus the practice was dropped. In
-1603 the Wiltshire Quarter Sessions published regulations
-to the effect that “Noe Clotheman shall
-keepe above one lombe in his house, neither any weaver
-that hath a ploughland shall keepe more than one
-lombe in his house. Noe person or persons shall
-keepe any lombe or lombs goeinge in any other house
-or houses beside their owne, or mayntayne any to doe
-the same.”<a id='r190' /><a href='#f190' class='c021'><sup>[190]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Few references occur to the wives of successful
-clothiers or wool-merchants who were actively interested
-in their husband’s business, though no doubt
-their help was often enlisted in the smaller or more
-struggling concerns. Thus the names of three widows
-are given in a list of eleven persons who were using
-handicrafts at Maidstone. “The better sorte of these
-we take to bee but of meane ability and most of them
-poore but by theire trade the poore both of the towne
-and country adjoyning are ymploied to spynnyng.”<a id='r191' /><a href='#f191' class='c021'><sup>[191]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>A pamphlet published in 1692 describes how in
-former days “the Clothier that made the cloth, sold it
-to the merchant, and heard the faults of his own
-cloth; and forc’d sometimes not only to promise
-amendment himself, but to go home and tell <i>Joan</i>, to
-have the Wool better pick’d, and the Yarn better
-spun.”<a id='r192' /><a href='#f192' class='c021'><sup>[192]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>A certain Rachel Thiery applied for a monopoly
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_101'>101</span>in Southampton for the pressing of serges, and having
-heard that the suit had been referred by the Queen
-to Sir J. Cæsar, the Mayor and Aldermen wrote,
-July 2, 1599, to let him know how inconvenient the
-granting of the suit would be to the town of Southampton.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I. Those strangers who have presses already would
-be ruined.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>II. Many of their men servants (English and
-strangers) bred up to the trade would be idle.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>III. “The woeman verie poore and beggarlie,
-altogether unable to performe it in workmanshipp or
-otherwise.... Againe she is verie idle, a prattling
-gossipp, unfitt to undertake a matter of so great a
-charge, her husband a poore man being departed
-from her and comorant in Rochell these 11 yeres at least.
-She is verie untrustie and approoved to have engaged
-mens clothes which in times past have been
-putt to her for pressinge. Verie insufficient to answer
-of herself men’s goodes and unable to procure anie good
-Caution to render the owners there goodes againe,
-havinge not so much as a howse to putt her head in,
-insomuch as (marvellinge under what coullour she doth
-seeke to attaine to a matter of such weight) we ...
-should hold them worsse than madd that would hazzard
-or comitt there goodes into her handes. And to
-conclude she is generallie held amongest us an unfitt
-woeman to dwell in a well governed Commonwealth.”<a id='r193' /><a href='#f193' class='c021'><sup>[193]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>An incident showing the wife as virtual manager of
-her husband’s business is described in a letter from
-Thomas Cocks of Crowle to Sir Robert Berkely, Kt.,
-in 1633. He writes complaining of a certain Careless
-who obtained a licence to sell ale “because he was a
-surgeon and had many patients come to him for help,
-and found it a great inconvenience for them to go to
-remote places for their diet and drink, and in that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_102'>102</span>respect obtained a licence with a limitation to sell ale
-to none but his patients ... but now of late
-especially he far exceeds his bounds.... A poor
-fellow who professed himself an extraordinary carder
-and spinner ... was of late set a work by my
-wife to card and spin coarse wool for blankets and when
-he had gotten some money for his work to Careless
-he goes.” Having got drunk there and coming back in
-the early hours of the morning he made such a noise
-in the churchyard “being near my chamber I woke
-my wife who called up all my men to go into the
-churchyard and see what the matter was.”<a id='r194' /><a href='#f194' class='c021'><sup>[194]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>That Mrs. Cocks should engage and direct her husband’s
-workpeople would not be surprising to seventeenth
-century minds, for women did so naturally in
-family industry; but when capitalized, business tended
-to drift away beyond the wife’s sphere, and thus even
-then it was unusual to find women connected with
-the clothing trade, except as wage-earners.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Of the processes involved in making cloth, weaving
-was generally done by men, while the spinning, which
-was equally essential to its production, was exclusively
-done by women and children.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>In earlier days weaving had certainly been to some
-extent a woman’s trade. “Webster” which is the
-feminine form of the old term “Webber” is used in
-old documents, and in these women are also specifically
-named as following this trade; thus on the Suffolk Poll-Tax
-Roll are entered the names of</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c030'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“John Wros, shepherd.</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Agneta his wife, webster.</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Margery, his daughter, webster.</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Thomas his servant and</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Beatrice his servant.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c029'>It appears also that there were women among the
-weavers who came from abroad to establish the cloth
-making in England, for a Statute in 1271 provides that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_103'>103</span>“all workers of woollen cloths, male and female,
-as well of Flanders as of other lands, may safely come
-into our realm there to make cloths ... upon the
-understanding that those who shall so come and make
-such cloths, shall be quit of toll and tallage, and of
-payment of other customs for their work until the end
-of five years.”<a id='r195' /><a href='#f195' class='c021'><sup>[195]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Later however, women were excluded from cloth
-weaving on the ground that their strength was insufficient
-to work the wide and heavy looms in use; thus
-orders were issued for Norwich Worsted Weavers in
-1511 forbidding women and maids to weave worsteds
-because “thei bee nott of sufficient powre to werke
-the said worsteddes as thei owte to be wrought.”<a id='r196' /><a href='#f196' class='c021'><sup>[196]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Complaint was made in Bristol in 1461 that weavers
-“puttyn, occupien, and hiren ther wyfes, doughters,
-and maidens, some to weve in ther owne lombes and
-some to hire them to wirche with othour persons of
-the said crafte by the which many and divers of the
-king’s liege people, likely men to do the king service
-in his wars and in defence of this his land, and sufficiently
-learned in the said craft, goeth vagrant and
-unoccupied, and may not have their labour to their
-living.”<a id='r197' /><a href='#f197' class='c021'><sup>[197]</sup></a></p>
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>At Kingston upon-Hull, the weavers Composition
-in 1490, ordained that “ther shall no woman worke
-in any warke concernyng this occupacon wtin the
-towne of Hull, uppon payn of xls. to be devyded in
-forme by fore reherced.”<a id='r198' /><a href='#f198' class='c021'><sup>[198]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>A prohibition of this character could not resist the
-force of public opinion which upheld the woman’s
-claim to continue in her husband’s trade. Widow’s
-rights are sustained in the Weaver’s Ordinances
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_104'>104</span>formulated by 25 Charles II. which declare that “it
-shall be lawfull for the Widow of any Weaver (who
-at the time of his death was a free Burgesse of the
-said Town, and a free Brother of the said Company)
-to use and occupy the said trade by herselfe, her
-Apprentices and Servants, so long as shee continues a
-Widow and observeth such Orders as are or shalbe
-made to be used amongst the Company of Weavers
-within this Town of Kingston-upon-Hull.”<a id='r199' /><a href='#f199' class='c021'><sup>[199]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Even when virtually excluded from the weaving of
-“cloaths” women continued to be habitually employed
-in the weaving of other materials. A petition
-was presented on their behalf against an invention
-which threatened a number with unemployment:
-“Also wee most humbly desire your worship that you
-would have in remembrance that same develishe invention
-which was invented by strangers and brought into
-this land by them, which hath beene the utter overthrowe
-of many poore people which heretofore have
-lived very well by their handy laboure which nowe are
-forced to goe a begginge and wilbe the utter Destruccion
-of the trade of weaving if some speedy course
-be not taken therein. Wee meane those looms with
-12, 15, 20, 18, 20, 24, shuttles which make tape, ribbon,
-stript garteringe and the like, which heretofore was
-made by poore aged woemen and children, but none
-nowe to be seene.”<a id='r200' /><a href='#f200' class='c021'><sup>[200]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The Rules of the Society of Weavers of the “Stuffs called
-Kiddirminster Stuffes” required that care should be taken to have
-apprentices “bound according to ye Lawes of ye Realme ... for which
-they shall be allowed 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> and not above, to be payd by him or her
-that shall procure the same Apprentice to be bound as aforesayd.”<a id='r201' /><a href='#f201' class='c021'><sup>[201]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_105'>105</span>John Grove was bound about the year 1655 to “the
-said George and Mary to bee taught and instructed
-in the trade of a serge-weaver,” and a lamentable
-account is given of the inordinate manner in which
-the said Mary did beat him.<a id='r202' /><a href='#f202' class='c021'><sup>[202]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>It is impossible from the scanty information
-available to arrive at a final conclusion concerning the
-position of women weavers. Clearly an attempt had
-been made to exclude them from the more highly
-skilled branches of the trade, but it is also evident that
-this had not been successful in depriving widows of
-their rights in this respect. Nor does the absence of
-information concerning women weavers prove that
-they were rarely employed in such work. The division
-of work between women and men was a question
-which aroused little interest at this time and therefore
-references to the part taken by women are accidental.
-They may have been extensively engaged in weaving for
-they are mentioned as still numerous among the handloom
-weavers of the nineteenth century.<a id='r203' /><a href='#f203' class='c021'><sup>[203]</sup></a> Another
-process in the manufacture of cloth which gave employment
-to women was “Burling.” The minister and
-Mayor of Westbury presented a petition to the Wiltshire
-Quarter Sessions in 1657 on behalf of certain poor
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_106'>106</span>people who had obtained their living by the “Burling
-of broad medley clothes,” three of whose daughters
-had now been indicted by certain persons desirous
-to appropriate the said employment to themselves;
-they show “that the said employment of Burling
-hath not been known to be practised among us
-as any prentice trade, neither hath any been apprentice
-to it as to such, but clothiers have ever putt theyr
-clothes to Burling to any who would undertake the
-same, as they doe theyr woolles to spinning. Also that
-the said imployment of Burling is a common good to
-this poore town and parish, conducing to the reliefe
-of many poore families therein and the setting of
-many poore children on work. And if the said imployment
-of Burling should be appropriated by any particular
-persons to themselves it would redound much to
-the hurt of clothing, and to the undoing of many
-poore families there whoe have theyre cheife mainteynance
-therefrom.”<a id='r204' /><a href='#f204' class='c021'><sup>[204]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>It was not however the uncertain part they played
-in the processes of weaving, burling or carding, which
-constituted the importance of the woollen trade in
-regard to women’s industrial position. Their employment
-in these directions was insignificant compared
-with the unceasing and never satisfied demand which
-the production of yarn made upon their labour. It is
-impossible to give any estimate of the quantity of wool
-spun for domestic purposes. That this was considerable
-is shown by a recommendation from the Commission
-appointed to enquire into the decay of the
-Cloth Trade in 1622, who advise “that huswyves
-may not make cloth to sell agayne, but for the provision
-of themselves and their famylie that the clothiers
-and Drapers be not dis-coraged.”<a id='r205' /><a href='#f205' class='c021'><sup>[205]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The housewife span both wool and flax for domestic
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_107'>107</span>use, but this aspect of her industry will be considered
-more fully in connection with the linen trade, attention
-here being concentrated on the condition of the
-spinsters in the woollen trade. Their organization
-varied widely in different parts of the country. Sometimes
-the spinster bought the wool, span it, and then
-sold the yarn, thus securing all the profit of the transaction
-for herself. In other cases she was supplied
-with the wool by the clothier, or a “market spinner”
-and only received piece wages for her labour. The
-system in vogue was partly decided by the custom
-of the locality, but there was everywhere a
-tendency to substitute the latter for the former
-method.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Statute I. Edward VI. chap. 6 recites that “the
-greatest and almost the whole number of the
-poor inhabitants of the county of Norfolk and the
-city of Norwich be, and have been heretofore for a
-great time maintained and gotten their living, by
-spinning of the wool growing in the said county of
-Norfolk, upon the rock [distaff] into yarn, and by all
-the said time have used to have their access to common
-markets within the said county and city, to buy their
-wools, there to be spun as is aforesaid, of certain persons
-called retailers of the said wool by eight penny worth
-and twelve penny worth at one time, or thereabouts,
-and selling the same again in yarn, and have not used to
-buy, ne can buy the said wools of the breeders of the
-said wools by such small parcels, as well as for that
-the said breeders of the said wools will not sell their
-said wools by such small parcels, as also for that the
-most part of the said poor persons dwell far off from
-the said breeders of the said wools.”<a id='r206' /><a href='#f206' class='c021'><sup>[206]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>During a scarcity of wool the Corporation at Norwich
-compelled the butchers to offer their wool fells
-exclusively to the spinsters during the morning hours
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_108'>108</span>until the next sheep-shearing season, so that the tawers
-and others might not be able to outbid them.<a id='r207' /><a href='#f207' class='c021'><sup>[207]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>It is suggested that nearly half the yarn used in the
-great clothing counties at the beginning of the seventeenth
-century was produced in this way: “Yarn is
-weekly broughte into the market by a great number of
-poor people that will not spin to the clothier for small
-wages, but have stock enough to set themselves on
-work, and do weekly buy their wool in the market by
-very small parcels according to their use, and weekly
-return it in yarn and make good profit, having the
-benefit both of their labour and of their merchandize
-and live exceeding well.... So many
-that it is supposed that more than half the cloth of
-Wilts., Gloucester and Somersetshire is made by
-means of these yarnmakers and poor clothiers that
-depend wholly on the wool chapman which serves them
-weekly for wools either for money or credit.”<a id='r208' /><a href='#f208' class='c021'><sup>[208]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Apparently this custom by which the spinsters
-retained in their own hands the merchandize of their
-goods still prevailed in some counties at the beginning
-of the following century, for it is said in a pamphlet
-which was published in 1741 “that poor People, chiefly
-Day Labourers, ... whilst they are employed
-abroad themselves, get forty or fifty Pounds of Wool
-at a Time, to employ their Wives and Children at home
-in Carding and Spinning, of which when they have
-10 or 20 pounds ready for the Clothier, they go to
-Market with it and there sell it, and so return home
-as fast as they can ... the common way the poor
-women in <i>Hampshire</i>, <i>Wiltshire</i>, and <i>Dorsetshire</i>, and
-I believe in other counties, have of getting to Market
-(especially in the Winter-time) is, by the Help of some
-Farmers’ Waggons, which carry them and their
-yarn; and as soon as the Farmers have set down their
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_109'>109</span>corn in the Market, and baited their Horses, they return
-home.... During the Time the waggons stop,
-the poor Women carry their Yarn to the Clothiers for
-whom they work; then they get the few Things they
-want, and return to the Inn to be carried home again....
-Many of them ten or twelve miles ...
-there will be in Market time 3 or 400 poor People
-(chiefly Women) who will sell their Goods in about an
-Hour.”<a id='r209' /><a href='#f209' class='c021'><sup>[209]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>According to this writer other women worked for the
-“rich clothier” who “makes his whole year’s provision
-of wool beforehand ... in the winter time has
-it spun by his own spinsters ... at the lowest
-rate for wages,” or they worked for the “market
-spinner” or middleman who supplied them with
-wool mixed in the right proportions and sold their
-yarn to the clothiers. In either case the return for
-their labour was less than that secured by the spinsters
-who had sufficient capital to buy their wool and sell
-the yarn in the dearest market. When the Staplers
-tried to secure a monopoly for selling wool, the Growers
-of wool, or Chapmen petitioned in self-defence
-explaining “that the clothier’s poor are all servants
-working for small wages that doth but keepe them
-alive, whereas the number of people required to work
-up the same amount of wool in the new Drapery is
-much larger. Moreover, all sorts of these people
-are masters in their trade and work for themselves,
-they buy and sell their materials that they work upon,
-so that by their merchandize and honest labour they
-live very well. These are served of their wools weekly
-by the wool-buyer.”<a id='r210' /><a href='#f210' class='c021'><sup>[210]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Opinion was divided as to whether the spinster
-found it more advantageous to work direct for the
-Clothier or for the Market Spinner. A proposal in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_110'>110</span>1693 to put down the middle-man, was advised against
-by the Justices of Assize for Wiltshire, on the ground
-that it was “likely to cause great reduction of wages
-and employment to the spinners and the poor, and a
-loss to the growers of wool, and no advantage in the
-quality of the yarn.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The Justices say in their report: “We finde the
-markett spinner who setts many spinners on worke
-spinnes not the falce yarn, but the poorer sorte of
-people (who spinne theyr wool in theyr owne howses)
-for if the markett spinners who spinne greate quantitys
-and sell it in the markett should make bad yarne,
-they should thereby disable themselves to maynetayne
-theyre creditt and livelyhood. And that the more
-spinners there are, the more cloth will be made and the
-better vent for Woolls (which is the staple commodity
-of the kingdome) and more poor will be set on worke.
-The markett spinners (as is conceived) are as well to be
-regulated by the lawe, for any falcity in mixing of
-theyr woolles as the Clothier is, who is a great markett
-spinner himselfe and doth both make and sell as falce
-yarne as any market spinner.... We finde the
-markett spinner gives better wages than the Clothier,
-not for that reason the Clothier gives for the falcity
-of the yarne, but rather in that the markett spinners
-vent much of their yarne to those that make the
-dyed and dressed clothes who give greater prizes than
-the white men do.”<a id='r211' /><a href='#f211' class='c021'><sup>[211]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The fine yarn used by the Clothiers required
-considerable skill in spinning, and the demand for it
-was so great in years of expansion that large sums
-of money were paid to persons able to teach the mysteries
-of the craft in a new district. Thus the Earl of
-Salisbury made an agreement in 1608 with Walter
-Morrell that he should instruct fifty persons of the
-parish of Hatfield, chosen by the Earl of Salisbury, in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_111'>111</span>the art of clothing, weaving, etc. He will provide
-work for all these persons to avoid idleness and for the
-teaching of skill and knowledge in clothing will pay
-for the work at the current rates, except those who are
-apprentices. The Earl of Salisbury on his part will
-allow Walter Morrell a house rent free and will pay
-him £100 per annum “for instructing the fifty persons,
-to be employed in:—the buying of wool, sorting it,
-picking it, dying it, combing it, both white and
-mingle colour worsted, weaving and warping and
-quilling both worsted of all sorts, dressing both
-woollen and stuffes, spinning woollen (wofe and
-warpe), spinning all sortes of Kersey both high
-wheel and low wheel, knitting both woollen and
-worsted.”<a id='r212' /><a href='#f212' class='c021'><sup>[212]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>A similar agreement is recorded in 1661-2 between
-the Bailiffs and Burgesses of Aldeburgh and “Edmund
-Buxton of Stowmarket, for his coming to set up his
-trade of spinning wool in the town and to employ the
-poor therein, paying him £50—for 5 years and £12—for
-expense of removing, with a house rent free and the
-freedom of the town.”<a id='r213' /><a href='#f213' class='c021'><sup>[213]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The finest thread was produced on the distaff, but
-this was a slow process, and for commoner work
-spinning wheels were in habitual use—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c030'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“There are, to speed their labor, who prefer</div>
- <div class='line'>“Wheels double spol’d, which yield to either hand</div>
- <div class='line'>“A sev’ral line; and many, yet adhere</div>
- <div class='line'>“To th’ ancient distaff, at the bosom fix’d,</div>
- <div class='line'>“Casting the whirling spindle as they walk.”<a id='r214' /><a href='#f214' class='c021'><sup>[214]</sup></a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c029'>The demands made on spinning by this ever expanding
-trade were supplied from three sources: (1) the wives
-of farmers and other well to do people, (b) the wives of
-husbandmen and (c) women who depended wholly
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_112'>112</span>on spinning for their living, and who are therefore
-called here spinsters. The first care of the farmers’
-wives was to provide woollen stuffs for the use of
-their families, but a certain proportion of their yarn
-found its way to the market. The clothiers at Salisbury
-who made the better grades of cloth were said to
-“buy their yarn of the finer kinds that come to the
-market at from 17d the lb. to 2<i>s.</i> 4d, made all of the
-finer sortes of our owne Welshire wool, and is spun by
-farmers’ wives and other of the better sorte of people
-within their owne houses, of whose names wee keep
-due Register and do write down with what cardes they
-promise us their several bundles of yarne are carded, and
-do find such people just in what they tell us, or can
-otherwise controule them when wee see the proofe
-of our cloth in the mill, ... and also some very
-few farmers’ wives who maie peradventure spinne
-sometimes a little of those sortes in their own houses
-and sell the same in the markett and is verie current
-without mixture of false wooll grease, etc.”<a id='r215' /><a href='#f215' class='c021'><sup>[215]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Probably a larger supply of yarn came from the
-families of husbandmen where wife and children
-devoted themselves to spinning through the long
-winter evenings. Children became proficient in the
-art at an early age, and could often spin a good thread
-when seven or eight years old. This subsidiary employment
-was not sufficient to supply the demand for
-yarn, and in the clothing counties numbers of women
-were withdrawn from agricultural occupations to
-depend wholly upon their earnings as spinsters.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The demand made by the woollen trade on the labour
-of children is shown by a report from the Justices
-of the Peace of the Boulton Division of the Hundred
-of Salford, ... “for apprentices there hath
-beene few found since our last certificate by reason
-of the greate tradeing of fustians and woollen cloth
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_113'>113</span>within the said division, by reason whereof the inhabitants
-have continuall employment for their children
-in spinning and other necessary labour about the
-same.”<a id='r216' /><a href='#f216' class='c021'><sup>[216]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Those who gave out the wool and collected the yarn
-were called market spinners, but the qualifying term
-“market” is sometimes omitted, and when men are
-referred to as spinners it may be assumed that they are
-organising the work of the spinsters, and not engaged
-themselves in the process of spinning.<a id='r217' /><a href='#f217' class='c021'><sup>[217]</sup></a> Though the
-demand for yarn generally exceeded the supply, wages
-for spinning remained low throughout the seventeenth
-century. A writer in the first half of the eighteenth
-century who urges the establishment of a nursery
-of spinners on the estate of an Irish landlord admits
-that their labour is “of all labour on wools the most
-sparingly paid for.”<a id='r218' /><a href='#f218' class='c021'><sup>[218]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Wages for spinning are mentioned in only three of
-the extant Quarter Sessions’ Assessments, and it
-is not specified whether the material is wool or
-flax:</p>
-<p class='c036'>1654. Devon. 6<i>d.</i> per week with meat and drink,
-or 1<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i> without them.</p>
-<p class='c036'>1688. Bucks. Spinners shall not have by the day more
-than 4<i>d.</i> without meat and drink.</p>
-<p class='c036'>1714. Devon. 1<i>s.</i> per week with meat and drink,
-2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> without them.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>These rates are confirmed by entries in account
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_114'>114</span>books,<a id='r219' /><a href='#f219' class='c021'><sup>[219]</sup></a> but it was more usual to pay by the piece.
-Though it is always more difficult to discover the
-possible earnings per day of women who are working
-by a piece rate in their own homes, it so happens that
-several of the writers who discuss labour questions
-in the woollen trade specially state that their estimates
-of the wages of spinners are based on full time.
-John Haynes quoted figures in 1715 which work out at
-nearly 1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> per week for the spinners of wool into stuffs
-for the Spanish Trade, and about 2<i>s.</i> 11<i>d.</i> for stockings,<a id='r220' /><a href='#f220' class='c021'><sup>[220]</sup></a>
-another pamphlet gives 24<i>s.</i> as the wages of
-9 spinsters for a week,<a id='r221' /><a href='#f221' class='c021'><sup>[221]</sup></a> while in 1763 the author of
-the “Golden Fleece” quotes 2<i>s.</i> 3<i>d.</i> a week for
-Spanish wools.<a id='r222' /><a href='#f222' class='c021'><sup>[222]</sup></a> Another pamphlet says that the
-wages in the fine woollen trade “being chiefly
-women and children, may amount, one with another
-to £6 per annum.”<a id='r223' /><a href='#f223' class='c021'><sup>[223]</sup></a> A petition from the weavers,
-undated, but evidently presented during a season of
-bad trade, declares that “there are not less than a
-Million of poor unhappy objects, <i>women and children
-only</i>, who ... are employed in Spinning Yarn
-for the Woollen Manufacturers; Thousands of these
-have now no work at all, and all of them have suffered
-an Abatement of Wages; so that now a Poor Woman,
-perhaps a Mother of many Children, must work very
-hard to gain Three Pence or Three Pence Farthing per
-Day.”<a id='r224' /><a href='#f224' class='c021'><sup>[224]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div><span class='pageno' id='Page_115'>115</span></div>
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Though these wages provided no margin for the
-support of children, or other dependants, it was
-possible for a woman who could spin the better quality
-yarns to maintain herself in independence.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>John Evelyn describes “a maiden of primitive
-life, the daughter of a poore labouring man, who had
-sustain’d her parents (some time since dead) by her
-labour, and has for many years refus’d marriage, or to
-receive any assistance from the parish, besides yᵉ little
-hermitage my lady gives her rent free: she lives on
-fourepence a day, which she gets by spinning; says she
-abounds and can give almes to others, living in greate
-humility and content, without any apparent affectation
-or singularity; she is continualy working, praying,
-or reading, gives a good account of her knowledge in
-religion, visites the sick; is not in the least given to
-talke; very modest, of a simple not unseemly behaviour,
-of a comely countenance, clad very plaine,
-but cleane and tight. In sum she appeares a saint
-of an extraordinary sort, in so religious a life as is
-seldom met with in villages now-a-daies.”<a id='r225' /><a href='#f225' class='c021'><sup>[225]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>It is probable that the wages for spinning were
-advanced soon after this date, for Defoe writes in
-1728 that “the rate for spinning, weaving and all other
-Manufactory-work, I mean in Wool, is so risen, that
-the Poor all over <i>England</i> can now earn or gain near
-twice as much in a Day, and in some Places, more
-than twice as much as they could get for the same work
-two or three Years ago ... the poor women now
-get 12<i>d.</i> to 15<i>d.</i> a Day for spinning, the men more in
-proportion, and are full of work.”<a id='r226' /><a href='#f226' class='c021'><sup>[226]</sup></a> “The Wenches
-... wont go to service at 12<i>d.</i> or 18<i>d.</i> a week
-while they can get 7<i>s.</i> to 8<i>s.</i> a Week at spinning; the
-Men won’t drudge at the Plow and Cart &amp;c., and perhaps
-get £6 a year ... when they can sit
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_116'>116</span>still and dry within Doors, and get 9<i>s.</i> or 10<i>s.</i> a
-Week at Wool-combing or at Carding.”<a id='r227' /><a href='#f227' class='c021'><sup>[227]</sup></a> “Would
-the poor Maid-Servants who choose rather to spin,
-while they can gain 9<i>s.</i> per Week by their Labour
-than go to Service at 12<i>d.</i> a week to the Farmers Houses
-as before; I say would they sit close to their work,
-live near and close, as labouring and poor People ought
-to do, and by their Frugality lay up six or seven
-shillings per Week, none could object or blame them
-for their Choice.”<a id='r228' /><a href='#f228' class='c021'><sup>[228]</sup></a> Defoe’s statement as to the high
-rate of wages for spinning is supported by an account
-of the workhouse at Colchester where the children’s
-“Work is Carding &amp; Spinning Wool for the Baymakers;
-some of them will earn 6<i>d.</i> or 7<i>d.</i> a Day.”<a id='r229' /><a href='#f229' class='c021'><sup>[229]</sup></a>
-But there is no sign of these higher wages in the
-seventeenth century.</p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Continual recriminations took place between
-clothiers and spinsters, who accused one another
-of dishonesty in their dealings. A petition of the
-Worsted Weavers of Norwich and Norfolk, and the
-Bayes and Sayes makers of Essex and Suffolk, to the
-Council proposes: “That no spinster shall winde or
-reele theire yarne upon shorter reeles (nor fewer
-thriddes) than have bene accustomed, nor ymbessell
-away their masters’ goodes to be punished by the
-next Justices of the Peace.”<a id='r230' /><a href='#f230' class='c021'><sup>[230]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>And again in 1622 the Justices of the Peace of
-Essex inform the Council: “Moreover wee understand
-that the clothiers who put forthe their woolle
-to spinne doe much complaine of the spinsters
-that they use great deceit by reason they doe wynde their
-yarne into knottes upon shorter reeles and fewer
-threedes by a fifth part than hath beene accustomed.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_117'>117</span>The which reeles ought to be two yardes about and
-the knottes to containe fowerscore threedes apeece.”<a id='r231' /><a href='#f231' class='c021'><sup>[231]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c013'>On the other hand in Wiltshire the weavers, spinners
-and others complained that they “are not able by
-their diligent labours to gett their livinges, by reason
-that the Clothiers at their will have made their workes
-extreme hard, and abated wages what they please. And
-some of them make such their workfolkes to doe their
-houshold businesses, to trudge in their errands, spoole
-their chains, twist their list, doe every command
-without giving them bread, drinke or money for many
-days labours.”<a id='r232' /><a href='#f232' class='c021'><sup>[232]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Report was made to the Council in 1631-2 that the
-reele-staffe in the Eastern Counties “was enlarged by
-a fift or sixt part longer than have bene accustomed and
-the poores wages never the more encreased.” Whereupon
-the magistrates in Cambridge agreed “that all
-spinsters shall have for the spinning and reeling of six
-duble knots on the duble reele or 12 on the single
-reele, a penny, which is more by 2<i>d.</i> in the shilling than
-they have had, and all labourers and other artificers
-have the like increase. Essex and Suffolk are ready
-to make the same increase provided that the same
-reel and rate of increase is used in all other counties
-where the trade of clothing and yarn-making is made,
-otherwise one county will undersell another to the
-ruin of the clothiers and the poor dependent on them.
-Therefore the Council order that a proportional
-increase of wages is paid according to the increase of
-the reel and the officers employed for keeping a
-constant reel to give their accounts to the Justices of
-the Assize.”<a id='r233' /><a href='#f233' class='c021'><sup>[233]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-<p class='c013'>Other complaints were made of clothiers who
-forced their workpeople to take goods instead of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_118'>118</span>money in payment of wages. At Southampton in
-1666 thirty-two clothiers, beginning with Joseph
-Delamot, Alderman, were presented for forcing their
-spinners “to take goods for their work whereby the
-poor were much wronged, being contrary to the statute,
-for all which they were amerced severally.” The
-records however do not state that the fine was exacted.<a id='r234' /><a href='#f234' class='c021'><sup>[234]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-<p class='c013'>Low as were the spinster’s wages even in seasons of
-prosperity, they, in common with the better-paid
-weavers endured the seasons of depression, which were
-characteristic of the woollen industry. The English
-community was as helpless before a period of trade
-depression as before a season of drought or flood.
-Employment ceased, the masters who had no sale for
-their goods, gave out no material to their workers,
-and men and women alike, who were without land as a
-resource in this time of need, were faced with starvation
-and despair.<a id='r235' /><a href='#f235' class='c021'><sup>[235]</sup></a> The utmost social demoralisation
-ensued, and family life with all its valuable
-traditions was in many cases destroyed.</p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Complaints from the clothing counties state
-“That the Poor’s Rates are doubled, and in some
-Places trebbled by the Multitude of Poor Perishing and
-Starving Women and Children being come to the
-Parishes, while their Husbands and Fathers <i>not able
-to bear the cries which they could not relieve</i>, are fled
-into <i>France</i> ... to seek their Bread.”<a id='r236' /><a href='#f236' class='c021'><sup>[236]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>These conditions caused grave anxiety to the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_119'>119</span>Government who attempted to force the clothiers
-to provide for their workpeople.<a id='r237' /><a href='#f237' class='c021'><sup>[237]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Locke reported to Carleton, Feb. 16th, 1622: “In
-the cloathing counties there have bin lately some
-poore people (such chieflie as gott their living by
-working to Clothiers) that have gathered themselves
-together by Fourty or Fifty in a company and gone
-to the houses of those they thought fittest to relieve
-them for meate and money which hath bin given more
-of feare than charitie. And they have taken meate
-openly in the markett without paying for it. The
-Lords have written letters to ten Counties where
-cloathing is most used, that the Clothier shall not put
-off his workemen without acquainting the Councill,
-signifying that order is taken for the buying off their
-cloathes, and that the wooll grower shall afford them
-his wooll better cheape but yet the cloathiers still
-complaine that they can not sell their cloath in Blackwell
-Hall....”<a id='r238' /><a href='#f238' class='c021'><sup>[238]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The Justices of Assize for Gloucester reported
-March 13, 1622, that they have interviewed the
-Clothiers who have been forced to put down looms
-through the want of sale for their cloth. The Clothiers
-maintain that this is due to the regulations and practices
-of the Company of Merchant Adventurers. They
-say that they, the Clothiers, have been working at a
-loss since the deadness of trade about a year ago,
-“their stocks and credits are out in cloth lying upon
-their hands unsold, and that albeit they have bought
-their woolles at very moderate prices, being such as do
-very much impoverish the grower, yet they cannot sell
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_120'>120</span>the cloth made thereof but to their intolerable losses,
-and are enforced to pawne theire clothes to keepe
-theire people in work, which they are not able to
-indure ... that there are at the least 1500
-loomes within the County of Gloucester and in ...
-the Citie and that xxs. in money and sixteene
-working persons and upwards doe but weekly mainteyne
-one loome, which doe require 1500li. in money,
-by the weeke to mainteyne in that trade 24000 working
-people besides all others that are releeved thereby,
-and so the wages of a labouring person is little above
-xii<i>d.</i> the week being much too little.”<a id='r239' /><a href='#f239' class='c021'><sup>[239]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>In June of the same year the Justices of Gloucester
-wrote to the Council: “The distress of those depending
-on the Cloth trade grows worse and worse. Our
-County is thereby and through want of money and
-means in these late tymes growne poore, and unable
-to releeve the infynite nomber of poore people
-residinge within the same (drawne hither by meanes
-of clothing) ... therefore very many of them
-doe wander, begg and steale and are in case to starve
-as their faces (to our great greefes) doe manifest....
-The peace is in danger of being broken.”<a id='r240' /><a href='#f240' class='c021'><sup>[240]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The distress was not limited to the rural districts;
-the records of the Borough of Reading describe efforts
-made there for its alleviation. “At this daye the
-complainte of the poore Spynners and Carders was
-agayne heard etc. The Overseers and Clothiers
-apoynted to provide and assigne them worke apeared
-and shewed their dilligence therein, yett the complaint
-for lacke of worke increaseth; for a remedye is agreed
-to be thus, viz: every Clothier according to his proportion
-of ... shall weekly assigne and put to spynning
-in the towne his ordinarye and course wooffe
-wooll, and shall not send it unto the country and if
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_121'>121</span>sufficient be in the towne to doe it.”<a id='r241' /><a href='#f241' class='c021'><sup>[241]</sup></a> At another
-time it is recorded that “In regard of the great
-clamour of divers poore people lackinge worke and
-employment in spynninge and cardinge in this Towne,
-yt was this daye thought fitt to convent all the undertakers
-of the stocke given by Mr. Kendricke, and uppon
-their appearaunce it was ordered, and by themselves
-agreed, that every undertaker, for every 300li. shall
-put a woowf a weeke to spyninge within the Towne,
-as Mr. Mayour shall apoynt, and to such spynners as
-Mr. Mayour shall send to them<a id='r242' /><a href='#f242' class='c021'><sup>[242]</sup></a>....”</p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>In these times of distress and in all disputes concerning
-wages and the exactions of the employers,
-men and women stood together, supporting each other
-in their efforts for the improvement of their lot.
-Thus the Justices of the Peace of Devonshire reported
-that “complaints were made by the most parte of
-the clothiers weavers, spinsters and fullers between
-Plymouth and Teignmouth,”<a id='r243' /><a href='#f243' class='c021'><sup>[243]</sup></a> and the Council is
-informed that at the last Quarter Sessions in Wilts,
-many “weavers, spinners, and fullers for themselves
-and for manie hundreds more ... complained
-of distress by increasing want of work....
-Clothiers giving up their trade, etc.”<a id='r244' /><a href='#f244' class='c021'><sup>[244]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Sometimes the petitions, though presented on behalf
-of spinners as well as weavers, were actually signed
-only by men. This was the case with the Weavers,
-Fullers and Spinners of Leonard Stanley and King
-Stanley in Gloucestershire, who petitioned on behalf
-of themselves and others, 800 at the least, young and
-old, of the said parishes, “Whereas your poore petitioners
-have heretofore bene well wrought and imployed
-in our sayd occupations belonging to the trade of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_122'>122</span>clothing whereby we were able in some poore measure
-and at a very lowe rate to maintaine ourselves and
-families soe as hitherto they have not suffered any
-extreme want. But now soe it is that we are
-likely for the time to come never to be imployed
-againe in our callinges and to have our trades become
-noe trades, whereunto we have bene trained up and
-served as apprentices according to the lawe, and
-wherein we have always spent our whole time and are
-now unfitt for ... other occupations, neither
-can we be received into worke by any clothiers in the
-whole countrey.”<a id='r245' /><a href='#f245' class='c021'><sup>[245]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>At other times women took the lead in demanding
-the redress of grievances from which all were suffering.
-When the case of the say-makers abating the wages of
-the spinsters, weavers and combers of Sudbury was
-examined by the Justices, the Saymakers alleged that
-all others did the same, but that they were content to
-give the wages paid by them if these were extended by
-proclamation or otherwise throughout the kingdom.
-“But if the order is not general it will be their
-undoing ...” Whereupon the Justices ordered
-the Saymakers to pay spinsters “for every seaven
-knottes one penny, the reel whereon the yarne is
-reeled to be a yard in length—no longer,” and to pay
-weavers “12<i>d.</i> a lb. for weaving thereof for white
-sayes under 5 lbs. weight.”<a id='r246' /><a href='#f246' class='c021'><sup>[246]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Shortly afterwards the Council received a petition
-from the Mayor asking to be heard by the Council
-or Commissioners to answer the complaint made
-against them. “by Silvia Harber widow set on worke
-by Richard Skinnir of Sudbury gent ... for
-abridging and wronging of the spinsters and weavers
-of the said borough in their wages and for some other
-wrongs supposed to bee done to the said Silvia Harber,”
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_123'>123</span>followed by an affidavit stating “Wee whose
-names are hereunder written doe testifye as followeth
-with our severell handes to our testification.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“1. That one Silvia Harber of our Towne of Sudbury
-comonly called Luce Harbor did say that shee had never
-undertaken to peticion the Lordes of the Counsell
-in the Behalfe of the Spinsters of Sudbury aforesaid
-but by the inducement of Richard Skinner gentleman
-of the Towne aforesaid who sent for her twoe or three
-times before shee would goe unto him for that
-purpose, and when shee came to him hee sent her to
-London and bare her charges. Witness, Daniel Biat
-Clement Shelley.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“2. That having conference with Richard Skinner
-aforesaid Gentleman, hee did confesse that hee would
-never have made any stir of complaint against the
-saymakers in behalf of weavers and spinsters, but that
-one Thomas Woodes of the towne abovesaid had
-given him Distaystfull wordes.” Witness, Vincent
-Cocke.<a id='r247' /><a href='#f247' class='c021'><sup>[247]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>No organisation appears to have been formed by
-the wage-earners in the woollen Trade. Their
-demonstrations against employers were as yet local
-and sporadic. The very nature of their industry
-and the requirements of its capitalistic organisation
-would have rendered abortive on their part the attempt
-to raise wages by restricting the numbers of persons
-admitted into the trade; but the co-operation in trade
-disputes between the men and women engaged in this
-industry, forms a marked contrast to the conditions
-which were now beginning to prevail in the apprentice
-trades and which will be described later. Though
-without immediate result in the woollen trade, it may
-be assumed that it was this habit of standing shoulder
-to shoulder, regardless of sex-jealousy, which ensured
-that when Industrialism attained a further development
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_124'>124</span>in the closely allied cotton trade, the union which was
-then called into being embraced men and women on
-almost equal terms.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The broad outline of the position of women in the
-woollen trade as it was established in the seventeenth
-century shows them taking little, if any, part in the
-management of the large and profitable undertakings
-of Clothiers and Wool-merchants. Their industrial
-position was that of wage-earners, and though the
-demand for their labour generally exceeded the supply,
-yet the wages they received were barely sufficient for
-their individual maintenance, regardless of the fact that
-in most cases they were wholly or partly supporting
-children or other dependants.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The higher rates of pay for spinning appear to have
-been secured by the women who did not depend
-wholly upon it for their living, but could buy
-wool, spin it at their leisure, and sell the yarn in the
-dearest market; while those who worked all the
-year round for clothiers or middlemen, were often
-beaten down in their wages and were subject to
-exactions and oppression.</p>
-<h3 id='Linen' class='c032'>C. <i>Linen.</i></h3>
-
-<p class='c029'>While the woollen trade had for centuries been developing
-under the direction of capitalism, it was only
-in the seventeenth century that this influence begins
-to show itself in the production of linen. Following the
-example of the clothiers, attempts were then made to
-manufacture linen on a large scale. For example,
-Celia Fiennes describes Malton as a “pretty large
-town built of Stone but poor; ... there was one
-Mr. Paumes that marry’d a relation of mine, Lord
-Ewers’ Coeheiress who is landlady of almost all yᵉ
-town. She has a pretty house in the place. There is
-the ruins of a very great house whᶜʰ belonged to yᵉ
-family but they not agreeing about it Caused yᵉ defaceing
-of it. She now makes use of yᵉ roomes off yᵉ
-out-buildings and gate house for weaving and Linning
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_125'>125</span>Cloth, haveing set up a manuffactory for Linnen whᶜʰ
-does Employ many poor people.”<a id='r248' /><a href='#f248' class='c021'><sup>[248]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>In spite of such innovations the production of linen
-retained for the most part its character as one of the
-crafts “yet left of that innocent old world.” The
-housewife, assisted by servants and children span flax
-and hemp for household linen, underclothes, children’s
-frocks and other purposes, and then took her thread
-to the local weaver who wove it to her order. Thus
-Richard Stapley, Gent., enters in his Diary: “A
-weaver fetched 11 pounds of flaxen yarn to make a
-bedticke; and he brought me ten yds of ticking for
-yᵉ bed, 3 yds and ¾ of narrow ticking for yᵉ bolster
-&amp; for yᵉ weaving of which I paid him 10<i>s.</i> and ye
-flax cost 8<i>d.</i> per pound. My mother spun it for me,
-and I had it made into a bed by John Dennit, a tailor,
-of Twineham for 8<i>d.</i> on Wednesday, July 18th, and it
-was filled on Saturday, August 4th by Jonas Humphrey
-of Twineham for 6<i>d.</i>” The weaver brought it home
-July 6th.<a id='r249' /><a href='#f249' class='c021'><sup>[249]</sup></a> Similarly Sarah Fell enters in her Household
-book: “Nov. 18th, 1675, by mᵒ. pᵈ. Geo. ffell
-weaver foʳ workeinge 32: ells of hempe tow cloth of
-Mothrs. at ld½ ell. 000.04.00.”<a id='r250' /><a href='#f250' class='c021'><sup>[250]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>By the industry and foresight of its female members
-the ordinary household was supplied with all its
-necessary linen without any need for entering the
-market, the expenses of middlemen and salesmen being
-so avoided. Nevertheless, it is evident that a considerable
-sale for linen had always existed, for the linen
-drapers were an important corporation in many
-towns. This sale was increased through an invention
-made about the middle of the century: By printing
-patterns on linen a material was produced which
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_126'>126</span>closely imitated the costly muslins, or calicoes as
-they were then called, imported from India; but at
-so reasonable a price that they were within the reach of
-a servant’s purse. Servants were therefore able to go
-out in dresses scarcely distinguishable from their
-mistresses’, and the sale of woollen and silk goods was
-seriously affected. The woollen trade became alarmed;
-riots took place; weavers assaulted women who were
-wearing printed linens in the streets, and finally,
-Parliament, always tender to the woollen trade,
-which furnished so large a part of the national revenue,
-prohibited their use altogether. The linen printers
-recognising that “the Reason why the <i>English</i> Manufacture
-of linnen is not so much taken notice of as the
-<i>Scotch</i> or <i>Irish</i>, is this, the <i>English</i> is mostly consumed
-in the Country, ... whereas the <i>Scotch</i> and <i>Irish</i>
-must come by sea and make a Figure at our custom’s
-house,”<a id='r251' /><a href='#f251' class='c021'><sup>[251]</sup></a> urged in their defence that “the linens
-printed are chiefly the Growth and Manufacture of
-<i>North Britain</i> pay 3<i>d.</i> per Yard to the Crown, ...
-and Employ so many Thousands of <i>British</i> poor, as
-will undoubtedly entitle them to the Care of a British
-Parliament.”<a id='r252' /><a href='#f252' class='c021'><sup>[252]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>But even this argument was unavailing against the
-political influence of the woollen trade. The spirit
-of the time favouring the spread of capitalistic enterprise
-from the woollen trade into other fields of action,
-an attempt was now made to form a Linen Company.
-Pamphlets written for and against this project furnish
-many details of the conditions then prevailing
-in the manufacture of linen. “How,” it was said,
-will the establishment of a Linnen Company “affect
-the Kingdom in the two Pillars that support it, that
-of the Rents of Land and the imploying our Ships
-and Men at Sea, which are thought the Walls of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_127'>127</span>Nation. For the Rents of Land they must certainly
-fall, for that one Acre of Flax will imploy as many
-Hands the year round, as the Wooll of Sheep that
-graze twenty Acres of Ground. The Linnen Manufactory
-imploys few men, the Woollen most, Weaving,
-Combing, Dressing, Shearing, Dying, etc. These Eat
-and Drink more than Women and Children; and so
-as the Land that the Sheep graze on raiseth the Rent,
-so will the Arable and Pasture that bears Corn, and
-breeds Cattle for their Subsistence. Then for the
-Employment of our Shipping, it will never be pretended
-that we can arrive to Exportation of Linnen; there
-are others and too many before us in that.... That
-Projectors and Courtiers should be inspired with
-New Lights, and out of love to the Nation, create
-new Methods in Trades, that none before found out;
-and by inclosing Commons the Liberty of Trade into
-Shares, in the first place for themselves, and then for
-such others as will pay for both, is, I must confess,
-to me, a Mystery I desire to be a Stranger unto....
-The very Name of a Company and Joint-Stock in
-Trade, is a spell to drive away, and keep out of that
-place where they reside, all men of Industry....
-The great motive to Labour and Incouragement of
-Trade, is an equal Freedom, and that none may be
-secluded from the delightful Walks of Liberty ...
-a Subjection in Manufactories where a People are
-obliged to one Master, tho’ they have the full Value
-of their Labour, is not pleasing, they think themselves
-in perpetual Servitude, and so it is observed in <i>Ireland</i>,
-where the <i>Irish</i> made a Trade of Linnen Yarn, no
-Man could ingage them, but they would go to the
-Market and be better satisfied with a less price, than
-to be obliged to one master.... There was
-much more Reason for a Company and Joint-stock
-to set up the Woollen Manufactory, in that ignorant
-Age, than there is for this of the Linnen Manufactory;
-that of the Woollen was a new Art not known in this
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_128'>128</span>Kingdom, it required a great Stock to manage, there
-was required Foreign as well as Native Commodities
-to carry it on ... and when the Manufactory
-was made, there must be Skill and Interest abroad to
-introduce the Commodity where others had the Trade
-before them; but there is nothing of all this in the
-Linnen Manufactory; Nature seems to design it
-for the weaker Sex. The best of Linnen for Service
-is called House Wife’s Cloth, here then is no need
-of the Broad Seal, or Joint-Stock to establish the
-Methods for the good Wife’s weeding her Flax-garden,
-or how soon her Maid shall sit to her Wheel after
-washing her Dishes; the good Woman is Lady of
-the Soil, and holds a Court within herself, throws
-the Seed into the Ground, and works it till she brings
-it there again, I mean her Web to the bleaching
-Ground.... To appropriate this which the
-poorest Family may by Labour arrive unto, that is,
-finish and bring to Market a Piece of Cloth, to me
-seems an infallible Expedient to discourage universal
-Industry.... The Linnen Manufactory above
-any Trade I know, if (which I must confess I doubt)
-it be for the Good of the Nation, requires more Charity
-than Grandeur to carry it on, the poor Spinner comes
-as often to her Master for Charity to a sick Child, or
-a Plaister for a Sore, as for Wages; and this she cannot
-have of a Company, but rather less for her labour,
-when they have beat all private Undertakers out.
-These poor Spinners can now come to their Master’s
-Doors at a good time, and eat of their good tho’ poor
-master’s Chear; they can reason with him, if any
-mistake, or hardship be put upon them, and this
-poor People love to do, and not be at the Dispose of
-Servants, as they must be where their Access can only
-be by Doorkeepers, Clerks, etc., to the Governors
-of the Company.”<a id='r253' /><a href='#f253' class='c021'><sup>[253]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_129'>129</span>On the other side it was urged that “All the Arguments
-that can be offer’d for Encouraging the woollen
-manufacture in <i>England</i> conclude as strongly in proportion
-for Encouraging the linnen manufacture in
-<i>Scotland</i>. ’Tis the ancient Staple Commodity there,
-as the Woollen is here.”<a id='r254' /><a href='#f254' class='c021'><sup>[254]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The part taken by women in the production of
-linen resembled their share in woollen manufactures.
-Some were weavers; thus Oliver Heywood says that
-his brother-in-law, who afterwards traded in fustians,
-was brought up in Halifax with Elizabeth Roberts,
-a linen weaver.<a id='r255' /><a href='#f255' class='c021'><sup>[255]</sup></a> Entries in the Foulis Account Book
-show that they were sometimes employed in bleaching
-but spinning was the only process which depended
-exclusively on their labour.</p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The rates of pay for spinning flax and hemp were
-even lower than those for spinning wool. Fitzherbert
-expressly says that in his time no woman could
-get her living by spinning linen.<a id='r256' /><a href='#f256' class='c021'><sup>[256]</sup></a> The market
-price was of little moment to well-to-do women
-who span thread for their family’s use and who
-valued the product of their labour by its utility
-and not by its return in money value; but the women
-who depended on spinning for their living were
-virtually paupers, as is shown by the terms in which
-reference is made to them:—“shee beeinge very poore,
-gettinge her livinge by spinninge and in the nature
-of a widowe, her husband beeinge in the service of
-His Majesty.”<a id='r257' /><a href='#f257' class='c021'><sup>[257]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Yet the demand for yarn and thread was so great
-that if spinners had been paid a living wage there
-would have been scarcely any need for poor relief.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The relation between low wages and pauperism was
-hardly even suspected at this time, and though the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_130'>130</span>spinsters’ maximum wages were settled at Quarter
-Sessions, no effort was made to raise them to a subsistence
-level. Instead of attempting to do so Parish
-Authorities accepted pauperism as “the act of God,” and
-concentrated their attention on the task of reducing
-rates as far as possible by forcing the pauper women
-and children, who had become impotent or vicious
-through neglect and under-feeding, to spin the thread
-needed by the community. Schemes for this
-purpose were started all over the country; a few
-examples will show their general scope. At Nottingham
-it was arranged for Robert Hassard to “Receave pore
-children to the number of viij. or more, ... and to
-haue the benefitt of theire workes and labours for
-the first Moneth, and the towne to allowe him towards
-their dyett, for everie one xiji<i>d.</i> a Weeke, and theire
-parents to fynde them lodginge; and Robert Hassard
-to be carefull to teache and instructe them speedyly
-in the spyninge and workinge heare, to be fitt to make
-heare-cloth, and allsoe in cardinge and spyninge of
-hards to make candle weeke, and hee to geue them
-correccion, when need ys, and the greate wheeles
-to be called in, and to be delivered for the vse of
-these ymployments.”<a id='r258' /><a href='#f258' class='c021'><sup>[258]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>A few years later in the scheme “for setting the
-poore on worke” the following rates of pay were
-established:—</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>6<i>d.</i> per pound for cardinge and spinning finest wool.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>5<i>d.</i> per pound for ye second sort.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>4<i>d.</i> ob. (= <i>obolus</i>, ½<i>d.</i>) for ye third sorte.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>1<i>d.</i> per Ley [skein] for ye onely spinninge all sortes of linen, the reele beeing 4 yards.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>ob. per pound for cardinge candleweake.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>1<i>d.</i> per pound for pulling midling [coarser part] out of it.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>1<i>d.</i> per pound for spininge candleweake.<a id='r259' /><a href='#f259' class='c021'><sup>[259]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_131'>131</span>Orders for the Workhouse at Westminster in 1560,
-read that “old Women or middle-Aged that might
-work, and went a Gooding, should be Hatchilers of
-the Flax; and one Matron over them. That common
-Hedges, and such like lusty naughty Packs, should be
-set to spinning; and one according to be set over
-them. Children that were above Six and not twelve
-Years of Age should be sent to winde Quills to
-the Weavers.”<a id='r260' /><a href='#f260' class='c021'><sup>[260]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>At a later date in London “Besides the relieving
-and educating of poor friendless harborless children
-in Learning and in Arts, many hundreds of poor
-Families are imployed and relieved by the said Corporation
-in the Manufactory of Spinning and Weaving:
-and whosoever doth repair either to the Wardrobe
-near Black-friars, or to Heiden-house in the Minories,
-may have materials of Flax, Hemp, or Towe to spin
-at their own houses ... leaving so much money
-as the said materials cost, until it be brought again
-in Yarn; at which time they shall receive money for
-their work ... every one is paid according to
-the fineness or coarseness of the Yarn they spin ...
-so that none are necessitated to live idly that are
-desirous or willing to work. And it is to be wished
-and desired, that the Magistrates of this city would
-assist this Corporation ... in supressing of
-Vagrants and common Beggars ... that so abound
-to the hindrance of the Charity of many pious people
-towards this good work.”<a id='r261' /><a href='#f261' class='c021'><sup>[261]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The Cowden overseers carried out a scheme of
-work for the poor from 1600 to 1627, buying flax
-and having it spun and woven into canvas. The work
-generally paid for itself; only one year is a loss of
-7<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i> entered, and during the first seventeen years
-the amount expended yearly in cash and relief did
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_132'>132</span>not exceed £6 11<i>s.</i> rising then in 1620 to £28 5<i>s.</i> 10<i>d.</i>,
-after which it fell again. The scheme was finally
-abandoned in 1627, the relief immediately rising to
-£43 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i><a id='r262' /><a href='#f262' class='c021'><sup>[262]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Richard Dunning describes how in Devon “for
-Employing Women, ... We agreed with one Person,
-who usually Employed several <i>Spinsters</i>, ... he
-was to employ in <i>Spinning</i>, <i>Carding</i>, etc., all such
-Women as by direction of the Overseers should apply
-to him for Work, to pay them such Wages as they
-should deserve.”<a id='r263' /><a href='#f263' class='c021'><sup>[263]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Mary Harrison, daughter of Henry Harrison, was
-comited to the hospitall at Reading to be taught to
-spyn and earne her livinge.”<a id='r264' /><a href='#f264' class='c021'><sup>[264]</sup></a> Similarly at Dorchester
-“Sarah Handcock of this Borough having
-this day been complayned of for her disorderly
-carriage and scolding in the work house ...
-... among the spinsters, is now ordered to
-come no more to the work house to work there,
-but is to work elsewhere and follow her work, or
-to be further delt withall according to the
-lawe.”<a id='r265' /><a href='#f265' class='c021'><sup>[265]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>At Dorchester a school was maintained for some
-years in which poor children were taught spinning:
-“This day John Tarrenton ... is agreed
-withall to vndertake charge and to be master of the
-Hospitall to employ halfe the children at present
-at burlinge,<a id='r266' /><a href='#f266' class='c021'><sup>[266]</sup></a> and afterwards the others as they are
-willing and able, To have the howse and Tenne per
-annum: wages for the presente, and yf all the Children
-come into burlinge, and ther be no need of the women
-that doe now teach them to spinne, then the Towne
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_133'>133</span>to consyder of Tarrington to giue him either part
-or all, that is ix pownd, the women now hath....”<a id='r267' /><a href='#f267' class='c021'><sup>[267]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Another entry, February 3rd, 1644-5, records that
-“Mr. Speering doth agree to provide spinning work
-for such poore persons that shall spin with those
-turnes as are now there [in the hospital house] ...
-and to pay the poore for their spinning after the vsual
-rates for the worke they doe.”<a id='r268' /><a href='#f268' class='c021'><sup>[268]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>In 1649 it is entered “This day Thos. Clench
-was here, and demanded 10 <i>li.</i> per ann. more
-than the stocke of the Hospital, which is 150 <i>li.</i>
-lent him for the furnishing of the house with worke
-for spinners, and for the overlooking to the children
-... the spinners shall have all the yeare 3½<i>d.</i> a <i>li.</i>
-for yearne ... and that there be as many
-children kept aworke as the roomes will hold ...
-wee shall take into consideracion the setting of the
-poore on worke in spinning of worsted, and knitting
-of stockins, and also of setting vp a trade of making
-sackcloth.”<a id='r269' /><a href='#f269' class='c021'><sup>[269]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Schemes for teaching spinning were welcomed
-with enthusiasm by the economists of the period,
-because in many districts the poor rates had risen to
-an alarming height. They believed that if only
-the poor would work all would be well. One writer
-urged “That if the Poor of the Place do not know how
-to spin, or to do the Manufacture of that Place, that
-then there be Dames hired at the Parish-Charge to
-teach them; and Men may learn to spin as well as
-Women, and Earn as much money at it as they can
-at many other employments.”<a id='r270' /><a href='#f270' class='c021'><sup>[270]</sup></a> Another writer calculated
-that if so employed “ixcl children whᶜʰ daielie
-was ydle may earne one wᵗ another vji<i>d.</i> a weke whᶜʰ
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_134'>134</span>a mownte in the yere to jMiijcxxxvˡⁱ. Also that
-jciiijxx women ... ar hable to earne at lest some
-xiji<i>d.</i>, some xxd., and some ijs. vji<i>d.</i> a weeke.”<a id='r271' /><a href='#f271' class='c021'><sup>[271]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>This zest for teaching spinning was partly due to
-the fact that the clothiers were represented on the
-local authorities, and often the extending of their
-business was hampered by the shortage of spinsters.
-But the flaw in all these arrangements was the fact
-that spinning remained in most cases a grant in aid,
-and could not, owing to the low wages paid, maintain
-a family, scarcely even an individual, on the level
-of independence.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Children could not live on 6<i>d.</i> a week, or grown
-women on 1<i>s.</i> or 1<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i> a week. And so the women,
-when they depended wholly upon spinning flax for
-their living, became paupers, suffering the degradation
-and loss of power by malnutrition which that condition
-implies.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>In a few cases this unsatisfactory aspect of spinning
-was perceived by those who were charged with relieving
-the poor. Thus, when a workhouse was opened in
-Bristol in 1654, the spinning scheme was soon abandoned
-as unprofitable.<a id='r272' /><a href='#f272' class='c021'><sup>[272]</sup></a> Later, when girls were again
-taught spinning, the managers of the school “soon
-found that the great cause of begging did proceed
-from the low wages for Labour; for after about
-eight months time our children could not get half
-so much as we expended in their provisions. The
-manufacturers ... were always complaining
-the Yarn was spun couarse, but would not advance
-above eightpence per pound for spinning, and we must
-either take this or have no work.” Finally the Governor
-took pains therefore to teach them to produce
-a finer yarn at 2<i>s.</i> to 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> per pound. This paid
-better, and would have been more profitable still if
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_135'>135</span>the girls as they grew older had not been sent to
-service or put into the kitchen.<a id='r273' /><a href='#f273' class='c021'><sup>[273]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Thomas Firmin, after a prolonged effort to help
-the poor in London, came to a similar conclusion.
-He explains that “the Poor of this Parish, tho’ many,
-are yet not so many as in some others; yet, even
-here there are many poor people, who receive Flax
-to spin, tho’ they are not all Pensioners to the Parish,
-nor, I hope, ever will be, it being my design to prevent
-that as much as may be; ... there are above
-500 more out of other Parishes in and about the
-City of <i>London</i>; some of which do constantly follow
-this Employment, and others only when they have
-no better; As, suppose a poor Woman that goes
-three dayes a Week to Wash or Scoure abroad, or one
-that is employed in Nurse-keeping three or four
-Months in a Year, or a poor Market-woman, who
-attends three or four Mornings in a Week with her
-Basket, and all the rest of the time these folks
-have little or nothing to do; but by means of this
-spinning are not only kept within doors ...
-but made much more happy and chearful.”<a id='r274' /><a href='#f274' class='c021'><sup>[274]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Firmin began his benevolent work in an optimistic
-spirit, “had you seen, as I have done many a time,
-with what joy and satisfaction, many Poor People
-have brought home their Work, and received their
-money for it, you would think no Charity in the World
-like unto it. Do not imagine that all the Poor People
-in <i>England</i>, are like unto those Vagrants you find up
-and down in the Streets. No, there are many Thousands
-whose necessities are very great, and yet do what
-they can by their Honest Labour to help themselves;
-and many times they would do more than they do
-but for want of Employment. Several that I have
-now working to me do spin, some fifteen, some sixteen,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_136'>136</span>hours in four and twenty, and had much rather do
-it than be idle.”<a id='r275' /><a href='#f275' class='c021'><sup>[275]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The work developed until “He employed in this
-manufacture some times 1600, some times 1700
-Spinners, besides Dressers of flax, Weavers and others.
-Because he found that his Poor must work sixteen
-hours in the day to earn sixpence, and thought their
-necessities and labour were not sufficiently supplied
-or recompensed by these earnings; therefore he was
-wont to distribute Charity among them ...
-without which Charity some of them had perished
-for want, when either they or their children fell ill....
-Whoever of the Spinners brought in two
-pound of Yarn might take away with ’em a Peck
-of Coals. Because they soiled themselves by carrying
-away Coals in their Aprons or Skirts ... he
-gave ’em canvass bags. By the assistance and order
-of his Friends he gave to Men, Women and Children
-3,000 Shirts and Shifts in two years.”<a id='r276' /><a href='#f276' class='c021'><sup>[276]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>“In above £4000, laid out the last Year, reckning
-House-rent, Servants wages, Loss by Learners, with
-the interest of the Money, there was not above £200
-lost, one chief reason of which was the kindness of
-several Persons, who took off good quantities ...
-at the price they cost me to spin and weave ...
-and ... the East India Co., gave encouragement
-to make their bags.” But the loss
-increased as time went on.... “In 1690 his
-design of employing the poor to spin flax was taken
-up by the Patentees of the Linen Manufacture,
-who made the Poor and others, whom they employed,
-to work cheaper; yet that was not sufficient to
-encourage them to continue the manufacture....
-The poor spinners, being thus deserted, Mr. <i>Firmin</i>
-returned to ’em again; and managed that trade as
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_137'>137</span>he was wont; But so, that he made it bear almost
-its own Charges. But that their smaller Wages
-might be comfortable to them he was more Charitable
-to ’em, and begged for ’em of almost all Persons of
-Rank with whom he had intimacy, or so much as
-Friendship. He would also carry his Cloth to divers,
-with whom he scarce had any acquaintance, telling
-’em <i>it was the Poor’s cloth, which in conscience they
-ought to buy at the Price it could be afforded</i>.”<a id='r277' /><a href='#f277' class='c021'><sup>[277]</sup></a> ...
-Finally, “he was persuaded by some, to make trial
-of the <i>Woollen Manufacture</i>; because at this, the Poor
-might make better wages, than at Linen-work.
-But the price of wool advancing very much, and the
-<i>London</i>-Spinsters being almost wholly unskilful at
-Drawing a Woollen-Thread, after a considerable
-loss ... and 29 months trial he gave off
-the project.”<a id='r278' /><a href='#f278' class='c021'><sup>[278]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Firmin’s experiment, corroborating as it does the
-results of other efforts at poor relief, shows that at
-this time women could not maintain themselves by
-the wages of flax spinning; still less could they,
-when widows, provide for their children by this
-means.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>But though the spinster, when working for wages
-received so small a return for her labour, it must not
-be forgotten that flax spinning was chiefly a domestic
-art, in which the whole value of the woman’s labour
-was secured to her family, unaffected by the rate
-of wages. Therefore the value of women’s labour
-in spinning flax must not be judged only according
-to the wages which they received, but was more truly
-represented by the quantity of linen which they
-produced for household use.</p>
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_138'>138</span>
- <h3 class='c032'>D. <i>Silk, and Gold and Silver.</i></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c029'>The history of the Silk Trade differs widely from
-that of either the Woollen or Linen Trades. The conditions
-of its manufacture during the fifteenth century
-are described with great clearness in a petition presented
-to Henry VI. by the silk weavers in 1455, which
-“Sheweth unto youre grete wisdoms, and also prayen
-and besechen the Silkewymmen and Throwestres of
-the Craftes and occupation of Silkewerk within the
-Citee of London, which be and have been Craftes
-of wymmen within the same Citee of tyme that noo
-mynde renneth unto the contrarie. That where
-it is pleasyng to God that all his Creatures be set in
-vertueux occupation and labour accordyng to their
-degrees, and convenient for thoo places where their
-abode is, to the nourishing of virtue and eschewyng
-of vices and ydelness. And where upon the same Craftes,
-before this tyme, many a wurshipfull woman within
-the seid Citee have lyved full hounourably, and therwith
-many good Housholdes kept, and many Gentilwymmen
-and other in grete noumbre like as there nowe be
-moo than a M., have been drawen under theym in
-lernyng the same Craftes and occupation full vertueusly,
-unto the plesaunce of God, whereby afterward they
-have growe to grete wurship, and never any thing
-of Silke brought into yis lande concerning the same
-Craftes and occupation in eny wise wrought, but in
-rawe Silk allone unwrought”; but now wrought goods
-are introduced and it is impossible any longer to obtain
-rawe material except of the worst quality ...
-“the sufferaunce whereof, hath caused and is like to
-cause, grete ydelness amongs yonge Gentilwymmen
-and oyer apprentices of the same Craftes within ye
-said Citee, and also leying doun of many good and notable
-Housholdes of them that have occupied the same
-Craftes, which be convenient, worshipfull and accordyng
-for Gentilwymmen, and oyer wymmen of wurship, aswele
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_139'>139</span>within ye same Citee as all oyer places within this
-Reaume.” The petitioners assumed that “Every
-wele disposed persone of this land, by reason and naturall
-favour, wold rather that wymmen of their nation born
-and owen blode hadde the occupation thereof, than
-strange people of oyer landes.”<a id='r279' /><a href='#f279' class='c021'><sup>[279]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The petition received due attention, Statute 33,
-Henry VI enacting that “Whereas it is shewed to
-our Sovereign Lord the King in his said parliament,
-by the grevous complaint of the silk women and
-spinners of the mystery and occupation of silk-working,
-within the city of London, how that divers
-Lombards and other strangers, imagining to destroy
-the said mystery, and all such virtuous occupations
-of women in the said Realm, to enrich themselves
-... have brought ... such silk so
-made, wrought, twined, ribbands, and chains falsely
-and deceitfully wrought, all manner girdels and other
-things concerning the said mystery and occupation,
-in no manner wise bringing any good silk unwrought,
-as they were wont.” Therefore the importation of
-“any merchandise ... touching or
-concerning the mystery of silk women, (girdels
-which come from Genoa only excepted,)” is
-forbidden.<a id='r280' /><a href='#f280' class='c021'><sup>[280]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>This statute was re-enacted in succeeding reigns
-with the further explanation that “as well men as
-women” gained their living by this trade.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Few incidents reveal more clearly than do these
-petitions the gulf separating the conception of women’s
-sphere in life which prevailed in mediæval London, from
-that which governed society in the first decade of
-the twentieth century. The contrast is so great that it
-becomes difficult to adjust one’s vision to the implications
-which the former contains. Other incidents
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_140'>140</span>can be quoted of the independence, enterprise, and
-capacity manifested by the prosperous women of
-the merchant class in London during the Middle
-Ages. Thus Rose de Burford, the wife of a wealthy
-London merchant, engaged in trading transactions
-on a large scale both before and after her husband’s
-death. She lent money to the Bishop in 1318, and
-received 100 Marks for a cope embroidered with coral.
-She petitioned for the repayment of a loan made by
-her husband for the Scottish wars, finally proposing
-that this should be allowed her off the customs which
-she would be liable to pay on account of wool about
-to be shipped from the Port of London.<a id='r281' /><a href='#f281' class='c021'><sup>[281]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>It is, however, a long cry from the days of Rose
-de Burford to the seventeenth century, when
-“gentilwymmen and other wymmen of worship” no
-longer made an honourable living by the silk
-trade; which trade, in spite of protecting statutes,
-had become the refuge of paupers. To obviate the
-difficulties of an exclusive reliance on foreign supplies
-for the raw material of the silk trade, James I. ordered
-the planting of 10,000 mulberry trees so that “multitudes
-of persons of both sexes and all ages, such
-as in regard of impotence are unfitted for other
-labour, may bee set on worke, comforted and
-releved.”<a id='r282' /><a href='#f282' class='c021'><sup>[282]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The unsatisfactory state of the trade is shown in
-a petition from the merchants, silk men, and others
-trading for silk, asking for a charter of incorporation
-because “the trade of silke is now become great
-whereby ... customes are increased and
-many thousands of poore men, women and children
-sett on worke and mayntayned. And forasmuch
-as the first beginning of this trade did take its being
-from women then called silkwomen who brought
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_141'>141</span>upp men servants, that since have become free of
-all or moste of the severall guilds and corporacions
-of London, whose ordinances beeing for other particular
-trades, meet not with, nor have power to reprove
-such abuses and deceipts as either have or are likely
-still to growe upon the silk trade.”<a id='r283' /><a href='#f283' class='c021'><sup>[283]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>A petition from the Master, Wardens and Assistants
-of the Company of Silk Throwers, shows that by
-this “Trade between Forty and Fifty thousand poor
-Men, Women and Children, are constantly Imployed
-and Relieved, in and about the City of <i>London</i>
-... divers unskilful Persons, who never were
-bred as Apprentices to the said Trade of <i>Silk-throwing</i>,
-have of <i>Late years</i> intruded into the said Trade, and
-have Set up the same; and dwelling in Places beyond
-the Bounds and Circuit of the Petitioners Search by
-their Charter, do use Divers Deceits in the <i>Throwing</i>
-and <i>Working</i> of the Manufacture of Silk, to the great
-Wrong and Injury of the Commonwealth, and the
-great Discouragement of the Artists of the said Trade.”<a id='r284' /><a href='#f284' class='c021'><sup>[284]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>An act of Charles II. provided that men, women and
-children, if native subjects, though not apprentices,
-might be employed to turn the mill, tie threads, and
-double and wind silk, “as formerly.”<a id='r285' /><a href='#f285' class='c021'><sup>[285]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>“There are here and there,” it was said, “a Silk
-Weaver or two (of late years) crept into some cities
-and Market Towns in <i>England</i>, who do employ
-such people that were never bound to the Trade ...
-in all other Trades that do employ the poor,
-they cannot effect their business without employing
-such as were never apprentice to the Trade ...
-the Clothier must employ the Spinner and Stock-carder,
-that peradventure were never apprentices
-to any trade, else they could never accomplish their
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_142'>142</span>end. And it is the same in making of Buttons and
-Bone-lace, and the like. But it is not so in this Trade;
-for they that have been apprentices to the Silk-weaving
-Trade, are able to make more commodities than can
-be easily disposed of ... because there hath
-not been for a long time any other but this, to place
-forth poor men’s Children, and Parish Boyes unto;
-by which means the poor of this Trade have been
-very numerous.”<a id='r286' /><a href='#f286' class='c021'><sup>[286]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>During this period all the references to silk-spinning
-confirm the impression that it had become
-a pauper trade. A pamphlet calling for the imposition
-of a duty on the importation of wrought silks
-explains that “The Throwsters, by reason of this
-extraordinary Importation of raw Silk, will employ
-several hundred persons more than they did before,
-as Winders, Doublers, and others belonging to the
-throwing Trade, who for the greatest part are
-poor Seamen and Soldier’s wives, which by this
-Increase of Work will find a comfortable Subsistence
-for themselves and Families, and thereby take off a
-Burthen that now lies upon several Parishes, which
-are at a great charge for their Support.”<a id='r287' /><a href='#f287' class='c021'><sup>[287]</sup></a> The
-“comfortable subsistence” of these poor seamen’s
-wives amounted to no more than 1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> or 1<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i>
-per week.<a id='r288' /><a href='#f288' class='c021'><sup>[288]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>There seems here no clue to explain the transition
-from a monopoly of gentlewomen conducting a
-profitable business on the lines of Family Industry
-to a disorganised Capitalistic Trade, resting on the
-basis of women’s sweated labour. The earlier monopoly
-was, however, probably favoured by the expensive
-nature of the materials used, and the necessity
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_143'>143</span>for keeping in touch with the merchants who imported
-them, while social customs secured an equitable
-distribution of the profits. With the destruction
-of these social customs and traditions, competition
-asserted its sway unchecked, till it appeared as
-though there might even be a relation between
-the costliness of the material and the wretchedness
-of the women employed in its manufacture; for the
-women who span gold and silver thread were in
-the same stage of misery.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Formerly women had been mistresses in this class
-of business as well as in the Silk Trade, but a Proclamation
-of June 11th, 1622, forbade the exercise of
-the craft by all except members of the Company of
-Gold Wire Drawers.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Under this proclamation the Silver thread of one
-Anne Twiseltor was confiscated by Thomas Stockwood,
-a constable, who entered her house and found her
-and others spinning gold and silver thread. “The
-said Anne being since married to one John Bagshawe
-hath arrested Stockwood for the said silver upon an
-action of £10, on the Saboth day going from Church,
-and still prosecuteth the suite against him in Guild
-Hall with much clamor.”<a id='r289' /><a href='#f289' class='c021'><sup>[289]</sup></a> Bagshawe and his wife
-maintained that the silver was sterling, and therefore
-not contrary to the Proclamation. Stockwood refused
-to return it unless he might have some of it. Therefore
-they commenced the suit against him.</p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Probably few, if any, women became members of the
-Company of Gold Wire Drawers, and henceforward they
-were employed only as spinners. Their poverty is shown
-by the frequency with which they are mentioned
-as inmates of tenement houses, which through overcrowding
-became dangerous to the public health.
-It was reported to the Council for example, that
-Katherine Barnaby “entertayns in her house in Great
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_144'>144</span>Wood Streate, divers women kinde silver spinners.”<a id='r290' /><a href='#f290' class='c021'><sup>[290]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>These poor women worked in the spinning sheds
-of their masters, and thus the factory system
-prevailed already in this branch of the textile
-industry; the costliness of the fabrics produced forbade
-any great expansion of the trade, and therefore
-the Masters were not obliged to seek for labour
-outside the pauper class.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The Curate, Churchwardens, Overseers and Vestrymen
-of the parish of St. Giles, Cripplegate, drew up
-the following statement: “There are in the said
-Parish, eighty five sheds for the spinning Gilt and
-Silver Thread, in which are 255 pair of wheels.”</p>
-
-<table class='table2' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='89%' />
-<col width='10%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c037'>The Masters with their Families amount unto</td>
- <td class='c018'>581</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c037'>These imploy poor Parish-Boys and Girls to the number of</td>
- <td class='c018'>1275</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c037'>There are 118 master Wire-Drawers, who with their wives, Children and Apprentices, make</td>
- <td class='c018'>826</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c037'>Master weavers of Gold and Silver Lace and Fringes</td>
- <td class='c018'>106</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c037'>Their Wives, Children, Apprentices and Journey Men amount unto</td>
- <td class='c018'>2120</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c037'>Silver and Gold Bone-Lace makers, and Silver and Gold Button makers with their Families</td>
- <td class='c018'>1000</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c037'>Windsters, Flatters of Gold and Silver and Engine Spinners with their Families</td>
- <td class='c018'>300</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c037'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c018'>────</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c037'>Total</td>
- <td class='c018'>6208</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class='c013'>They continue: “The Poor’s Rate of the Parish
-amounts to near Four Thousand Pounds per
-annum.... The Parish ... at this
-present are indebted One Thousand Six Hundred and
-Fifty Pounds. Persons are daily removing out of
-the Parish, by Reason of this heavy Burthen, empty
-Houses increasing. If a Duty be laid on the manufacture
-of Gold and Silver wyres the Poor must
-necessarily be increased.”<a id='r291' /><a href='#f291' class='c021'><sup>[291]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_145'>145</span>Such a statement is in itself proof that Gold and
-Silver Thread making ranked among the pauper
-trades in which the wages paid must needs be supplemented
-out of the poor rates.</p>
-<h3 class='c032'>E. <span class='sc'>Conclusion</span>.</h3>
-
-<p class='c029'><span class='sc'>It</span> has been shown that in textile industries all spinning
-was done exclusively by women and children, while
-they were also engaged to some extent in other processes,
-such as weaving, burling, bleaching, fulling,
-etc. The fact that the nation depended entirely
-upon women for the thread from which its clothing
-and household linen was made must be remembered
-in estimating their economic position. Even if no
-other work had fallen to their share, they can hardly
-have been regarded as mere dependants on their
-husbands when the clothing for the whole family
-was spun by their hands; but it has been explained
-in the previous chapter that in many cases the mother,
-in addition to spinning, provided a large proportion
-of the food consumed by her family. If the father
-earned enough money to pay the rent and a few
-other necessary expenses, the mother could and did,
-feed and clothe herself and her children by her
-own labours when she possessed enough capital to
-confine herself wholly to domestic industry. The
-value of a woman’s productive capacity to her family
-was, however, greatly reduced when, through poverty,
-she was obliged to work for wages, because then, far
-from being able to feed and clothe her family, her
-wages were barely adequate to feed herself.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>This fact indicates the weakness of women’s position
-in the labour market, into which they were being
-forced in increasing numbers by the capitalistic organisation
-of industry. In consequence of this weakness,
-a large proportion of the produce of a woman’s labour
-was diverted from her family to the profit of the
-capitalist or the consumer; except in the most skilled
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_146'>146</span>branches of the woollen industry, spinning was a
-pauper trade, a “sweated industry,” which did not
-provide its workers with the means for keeping
-themselves and their families in a state of efficiency,
-but left them to some extent dependent on other
-sources for their maintenance.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Comparing the various branches of textile industry
-together, an interesting light is thrown upon
-the reactions between capitalistic organisation of
-labour and women’s economic position.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Upper-class women had lost their unique position
-in the silk trade, and the wives of wealthy clothiers
-and wool-merchants appear to have seldom taken
-an active interest in business matters. Thus it was
-only as wage-earners that women were extensively
-employed in the textile trades.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Their wages were lowest in the luxury trades
-i.e., silk, silver and gold, and in the linen trade. The
-former were now wholly capitalistic, but the demand
-for luxuries being limited and capable of little expansion,
-the labour available in the pauper classes
-was sufficient to satisfy it. The situation was different
-in the linen and allied trades, where the demand for
-thread, either of flax or hemp, appears generally to
-have been in excess of the supply. Although the
-larger part of the linen manufactured in England was
-still produced under the conditions of domestic
-industry, the demand for thread for trade purposes
-was steady enough to suggest to Parish Authorities
-the value of spinning as a means of reducing
-the poor rates. It did not occur to them, however,
-that if the wages paid for spinning were higher
-the poor would have been as eager to learn spinning
-as to gain apprenticeship in the skilled trades,
-and thus the problem of an adequate supply of
-yarn might have been solved at one stroke with the
-problem of poverty itself; no attempt was made to
-raise the wages, and the production of thread for
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_147'>147</span>trade purposes continued to be subsidised out of
-the poor rates. The consequent pauperisation
-of large numbers of women was a greater disaster
-than even the burthen of the poor rates. Instead
-of the independence and self-reliance which might
-have been secured through adequate wages, mothers
-were not only humiliated and degraded, but their
-physical efficiency and that of their children was
-lowered owing to the inadequacy of the grudging
-assistance given by the Churchwardens and
-Overseers.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The woollen trade, in which capitalistic organisation
-had attained its largest development, presents
-a more favourable aspect as regards women’s wages.
-Already in the seventeenth century a spinster could
-earn sufficient money to maintain her individual self.
-In spite of periodic seasons of depression, the woollen
-trade was rapidly expanding; often the scope of
-the clothiers was limited by the quantity of yarn
-available, and so perforce they must seek for labour
-outside the pauper class. Possibly a rise was already
-taking place in the spinsters’ wages at the close of
-the century, and it is interesting to note that
-during this period the highest wages were earned,
-not by the women whose need for them was greatest,
-that is to say the women who had children depending
-exclusively on their wages, but rather by the well-to-do
-women who could afford to buy the wool for their
-spinning, and hold the yarn over till an advantageous
-opportunity arose for selling it.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Spinning did not present itself to such women
-as a means of filling up vacant hours which they would
-otherwise have spent in idleness, but as an alternative
-to some other profitable occupation, so numerous
-were the opportunities offered to women for productive
-industry within the precincts of the home.
-Therefore to induce women of independent position
-to work for him, the Clothier was obliged to offer
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_148'>148</span>higher wages than would have been accepted by
-those whose children were suffering from hunger.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Somewhat apart from economics and the rate
-of wages, is the influence which the developments
-of the woollen trade exercised on women’s social
-position, through the disintegration of the social
-organisation known as the village community. The
-English village had formed a social unit almost
-self-contained, embracing considerable varieties of
-wealth, culture and occupation, and finding self-expression
-in a public opinion which provided adequate
-sanction for its customs, and determined all
-the details of manners and morals. In the formation
-of this public opinion women took an active
-part.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The seasons of depression in the Woollen Trade
-brought to such communities in the “Clothing
-Counties” a desolation which could only be rivalled
-by Pestilence or Famine. Work came to a standstill,
-and wholesale migrations followed. Many fathers
-left their starving families, in search of work elsewhere
-and were never heard of again. The traditions of
-family life and the customs which ruled the affairs
-of the village were lost, never to be again restored,
-and with them disappeared, to a great extent, the
-recognised importance of women in the life of the
-community.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The social problems introduced by the wages
-system in its early days are described in a contemporary
-pamphlet. It must be remembered that the
-term “the poor” as used at this time signified the
-pauper class, hard-working, industrious families who
-were independent of charity or assistance from the
-poor rates being all included among the “common
-people.” “I cannot acknowledge,” the writer says,
-“that a Manufacture maketh fewer poor, but rather
-the contrary. For tho’ it sets the poor on work
-where it finds them, yet it draws still more to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_149'>149</span>the place; and their Masters allow wages so mean,
-that they are only preserved from starving whilst
-they can work; when Age, Sickness, or Death
-comes, themselves, their wives or their children are
-most commonly left upon the Parish; which is the
-reason why those Towns (as in the <i>Weald of Kent</i>)
-whence the clothing is departed, have fewer poor
-than they had before.”<a id='r292' /><a href='#f292' class='c021'><sup>[292]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c001' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_150'>150</span>
- <h2 class='c011'>CHAPTER V<br /> <br /><span class='sc'>Crafts and Trades.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c038'>(A) <i>Crafts.</i> Influence of Gilds—Inclusion of women—Position of craftsman’s
-wife—Purposes of Gilds—The share of women in religious, social and trading
-privileges—Admission chiefly by marriage—Stationer’s Company—Carpenter’s
-Company—Rules of other Gilds and Companies—Apprenticeship to women—Exclusion
-of women did not originate in sex-jealousy—Position of women in open
-trades—Women’s trades.</p>
-
-<p class='c039'>(B) <i>Retail Trades.</i> Want of technical training inclined women
-towards retailing—Impediments in their way—Apprenticeship of girls to
-shopkeepers—Prosecution of unauthorised traders—Street and market
-trading—Pedlars, Regraters, Badgers—Opposition of shopkeepers.</p>
-
-<p class='c039'>(C) <i>Provision Trades.</i></p>
-<p class='c040'>1. <i>Bakers.</i> Never specially a woman’s trade—Widows—Share of
-married women.</p>
-<p class='c040'>2. <i>Millers.</i> Occasionally followed by women.</p>
-<p class='c040'>3. <i>Butchers.</i> Carried on by women as widows and by married women—also
-independently—Regrating.</p>
-<p class='c040'>4. <i>Fishwives.</i> Generally very poor.</p>
-<p class='c040'>5. <i>Brewers.</i> Originally a special women’s trade—Use of feminine form
-Brewster—Creation of monopoly—Exclusion of women by the trade
-when capitalised—retailing still largely in hands of women.</p>
-<p class='c040'>6. <i>Vintners.</i></p>
-<p class='c012'><span class='sc'>Agriculture</span> and the textile industries having been
-considered separately, owing to their importance and
-the very special conditions obtaining in both, the other
-forms of industry in which women were employed
-may be roughly divided into three classes, according
-to certain influences which made them more or less
-suitable for women’s employment.—(<i>a</i>) Skilled Trades.
-(<i>b</i>) Retail Trades. (<i>c</i>) Provision Trades.</p>
-<p class='c013'>(<i>a</i>) <i>The Skilled Trades.</i> Most characteristic of
-the skilled trades are those crafts which became more
-or less highly organised and specialised by means
-of Gilds; though girls were seldom apprenticed to
-the gild trades, yet her marriage to a member of the
-Gild conferred upon a woman her husband’s rights
-and privileges; and as she retained these after his
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_151'>151</span>death, she could, as a widow, continue to control
-and direct the business which she inherited from
-her husband. In many trades the gild organisation
-broke down, and though the form of apprenticeship
-was retained its observance secured few, if any,
-privileges. Some skilled trades were chiefly if not
-wholly, in the hands of women, and these appear
-never to have been organised, though long apprenticeships
-were served by the girls who entered them.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>(<i>b</i>) <i>The Retail Trades.</i> The classification of retail
-trades as a group distinct from the Skilled Trades and
-the Provision Trades is somewhat arbitrary, because
-under the system of Family Industry, the maker of
-the goods was often his own salesman, or the middlemen
-who sold the goods to the consumers were
-themselves organised into gilds. Nevertheless, from
-the woman’s point of view retailing deserves separate
-consideration, because, whether as a branch of Family
-Industry or as a trade in itself, the employment of
-selling was so singularly adapted to the circumstances
-of women, that among their resources it may almost
-take rank with agriculture and spinning.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>(<i>c</i>) <i>The Provision Trades</i> also, whether concerned
-with the production or only with the sale of Provisions,
-occupy a special position, because the provisioning
-of their households has been regarded from time
-immemorial as one of the elementary duties falling
-to the share of women, and it is interesting to note
-how far skill acquired by women in such domestic
-work was useful to them in trade.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>In all three classes of industry women were employed
-as their husbands’ assistants or partners, but in the
-middle ages married women also engaged in business
-frequently on their own account. This was so
-usual that almost all the early Customs of the Boroughs
-enable a woman, when so trading, to go to law
-as though she were a femme sole, and provide
-that her husband shall not be responsible for her
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_152'>152</span>debts. For example, the Customs of the City of
-London declare that: “Where a woman coverte
-de baron follows any craft within the said city by
-herself apart, with which the husband in no way
-intermeddles, such woman shall be bound as a single
-woman in all that concerns her said craft. And if
-the wife shall plead as a single woman in a Court of
-Record, she shall have her law and other advantages
-by way of plea just as a single woman. And if she
-is condemned she shall be committed to prison until
-she shall have made satisfaction; and neither the
-husband nor his goods shall in such case be charged
-or interfered with. If a wife, as though a single
-woman, rents any house or shop within the said city,
-she shall be bound to pay the rent of the said house or
-shop, and shall be impleaded and sued as a single
-woman, by way of debt if necessary, notwithstanding
-that she was coverte de baron, at the time of such
-letting, supposing that the lessor did not know thereof....
-Where plaint of debt is made against
-the husband, and the plaintiff declares that the husband
-made the contract with the plaintiff by the hand of
-the wife of such defendant, in such case the said
-defendant shall have the aid of his wife, and shall
-have a day until the next Court, for taking counsel
-with his wife.”<a id='r293' /><a href='#f293' class='c021'><sup>[293]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The Customal of the Town and Port of Sandwich
-provides that “if a woman who deals publickly in
-fish, fruit, cloth or the like, be sued to the amount of
-goods delivered to her, she ought to answer either
-with or without her husband, as the plaintiff pleases.
-But in every personal plea of trespass, she can neither
-recover nor plead against any body, without her
-husband. If she be not a public dealer, she cannot
-answer, being a covert baron.”<a id='r294' /><a href='#f294' class='c021'><sup>[294]</sup></a> Similarly at Rye,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_153'>153</span>“if any woman that is covert baron be impleaded
-in plea of debt, covenant broken, or chattels withheld,
-and she be known for sole merchant, she ought
-to answer without the presence of her baron.”<a id='r295' /><a href='#f295' class='c021'><sup>[295]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>In Carlisle it was said that “where a wife that
-haith a husband use any craft wiᵗʰin this citie or the
-liberties of the same besides her husband crafte or
-occupation and that he mel not wᵗʰ her sayd
-craft this wife shalbe charged as woman sole. And
-if the husband and the wife be impledit in such case
-the wife shall plead as woman sole. And if she be
-condempned she shall goe to ward unto she haue
-mayd agrement. And the husband nor his guds
-shal not in this case be charged. And if the woman
-refuse to appeare and answere the husband or servand
-to bryng her in to answer.”<a id='r296' /><a href='#f296' class='c021'><sup>[296]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Though examples of the separate trading of women
-occur frequently in the seventeenth century, no doubt
-the more usual course was for her to assist her husband
-in his business. When this was transacted at home
-her knowledge of it was so intimate that she could
-successfully carry on the management during her
-husband’s absence. How complete was the reliance
-which men placed upon their wives under these
-circumstances is illustrated by the story of John
-Adams, a Quaker from Yorkshire, who took a long
-journey “in the service of Truth” to Holland and
-Germany. He describes how a fearful being visited
-him by night in a vision, telling him that he had been
-deceived, and not for the first time, in undertaking
-this service, and that all was in confusion at home.
-“The main reason why things are so is, thy wife,
-that used to be at the helm in thy business, is dead.”
-Thoroughly alarmed, he was preparing to hurry
-home when a letter arrived, saying that all was well,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_154'>154</span>“whereby I was relieved in mind, and confirmed I
-was in my place, and that it was Satan, by his transformation,
-who had deceived and disturbed me.”<a id='r297' /><a href='#f297' class='c021'><sup>[297]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The understanding and good sense which enabled
-women to assume control during the temporary
-absence of their husbands, fitted them also to bear
-the burden alone when widowed. Her capacity
-was so much taken for granted that public opinion
-regarded the wife as being virtually her husband’s
-partner, leases or indentures were made out in their
-joint names, and on the husband’s death the wife
-was left in undisturbed possession of the stock,
-apprentices and goodwill of the business.</p>
-<h3 class='c032'>A. <i>Skilled Trades or Crafts.</i></h3>
-
-<p class='c029'>The origin of the Craft Gilds is obscure. They
-were preceded by Religious Gilds in which men
-and women who were associated in certain trades
-united for religious and social purposes. Whether
-these Religious Gilds developed naturally into organisations
-concerned with the purpose of trade, or whether
-they were superseded by new associations whose
-first object was the regulation and improvement
-of the craft and with whom the religious and social ceremonies
-were of secondary importance is a disputed
-point, which, if elucidated, might throw some light
-on the industrial history of women. In the obscurity
-which envelopes this subject one certain fact emerges;
-the earlier Gilds included sisters as well as brothers,
-the two sexes being equally concerned with the
-religious and social observances which constituted
-their chief functions.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>As the Gilds become more definitely trade organisations
-the importance of the sisters diminishes,
-and in some, the Carpenters for example, they appear
-to be virtually excluded from membership though
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_155'>155</span>this exclusion is only tacitly arrived at by custom,
-and is not enforced by rules. In other Gilds, such
-as the Girdlers and Pewterers, it is evident that
-though women’s names do not occur in lists of wardens
-or assistants, yet they were actively engaged in these
-crafts and, like men, were subject to and protected
-by the regulations of their Gild or Company.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Very little is yet known of the industrial position
-of Englishwomen in the middle ages. Poll-tax returns
-show, however, that they were engaged in many
-miscellaneous occupations. Thus the return for Oxford
-in 1380 mentions six trades followed by women,
-viz.—37 spinsters, 11 shapesters (tailors), 9 tapsters
-(inn-keepers), 3 sutrices (shoemakers,) 3 hucksters,
-5 washerwomen, while in six others both men and
-women were employed, namely butchers, brewers,
-chandlers, ironmongers, netmakers and kempsters
-(wool-combers). 148 women were enrolled as ancillæ
-or servants, and 81 trades were followed by only men.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>A similar return for the West Riding of Yorks
-in 1379 declares the women employed in different
-trades to be as follows:—6 chapmen, 11 inn keepers,
-1 farrier, 1 shoemaker, 2 nurses, 39 brewsters, 2 farmers,
-1 smith, 1 merchant, 114 domestic servants and farm
-labourers, 66 websters, (30 with that surname), 2
-listers or dyers, 2 fullers or walkers, and 22 seamstresses.<a id='r298' /><a href='#f298' class='c021'><sup>[298]</sup></a>
-In every case these would be women who
-were carrying on their trade separately from their
-husbands, or as widows. During the following
-centuries women’s names are given in the returns
-made of the tradesmen working in different Boroughs,
-occurring sometimes in trades which would seem to
-modern ideas most unlikely for them. Thus 5
-widows and 35 men’s names are given in a list of the
-smiths at Chester for the year 1574.<a id='r299' /><a href='#f299' class='c021'><sup>[299]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_156'>156</span>It must be remembered that, except those who are
-classed as servants, all grown-up women were either
-married or widows. It was quite usual for a married
-woman to carry on a separate business from her
-husband as sole merchant, but it was still more customary
-for her to share in his enterprise, and only after
-his death for the whole burden to fall upon her
-shoulders. How natural it was for a woman to regard
-herself as her husband’s partner will be seen when
-the conditions of family industry are considered.
-Before the encroachments of capitalism the members
-of the Craft Gilds were masters, not of other men,
-but of their craft. The workshop was part of the
-home, and in it, the master, who in the course of a
-long apprenticeship had acquired the technical mastery
-of his trade, worked with his apprentices, one or two
-journeymen and his wife and children. The number
-of journeymen and apprentices was strictly limited
-by the Gild rules; the men did not expect to remain
-permanently in the position of wage-earners, but
-hoped in course of time to marry and establish themselves
-as masters in their craft. Apart from the
-apprentices and journeymen no labour might be
-employed, except that of the master’s wife and children;
-but there are in every trade processes which do not
-require a long technical training for their performance,
-and thus the assistance of the mistress became important
-to her husband, whether she was skilled in
-the trade or not, for the work if not done by her
-must fall upon him. Sometimes her part was manual,
-but more often she appears to have taken charge of
-the financial side of the business, and is seen in the
-role of salesman, receiving payments for which her
-receipt was always accepted as valid, or even acting
-as buyer. In either case her services were so essential
-to the business that she usually engaged a servant
-for household matters, and was thus freed from the
-routine of domestic drudgery. Defoe, writing in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_157'>157</span>the first decades of the eighteenth century, notes that
-“women servants are now so scarce that from thirty
-and forty shillings a Year, their Wages are increased
-of late to six, seven and eight pounds <i>per Annum</i>,
-and upwards ... an ordinary Tradesman cannot
-well keep one; but his Wife, who might be useful
-in his Shop, or Business, must do the Drudgery of
-Household Affairs; And all this, because our
-Servant Wenches are so puff’d up with Pride
-now-a-Days that they never think they go fine
-enough.”<a id='r300' /><a href='#f300' class='c021'><sup>[300]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The position of a married woman in the tradesman
-class was far removed from that of her husband’s
-domestic servant. She was in very truth mistress of
-the household in that which related to trade as well as
-in domestic matters, and the more menial domestic
-duties were performed by young unmarried persons
-of either sex. To quote Defoe again, “it is but
-few Years ago, and in the Memory of many now living,
-that all the Apprentices of the Shopkeepers and Warehouse-keepers
-... submitted to the most servile
-Employments of the Families in which they serv’d;
-such as the <i>young Gentry</i>, their Successors in the
-same Station, scorn so much as the Name of now;
-such as <i>cleaning</i> their Masters’ Shoes, bringing <i>Water</i>
-into the Houses from <i>the Conduits</i> in the Street,
-which they carried on their Shoulders in long Vessels
-call’d Tankards; also waiting at Table, ... but
-their Masters are oblig’d to keep Porters or Footmen
-to wait upon the apprentices.”<a id='r301' /><a href='#f301' class='c021'><sup>[301]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The rules of the early Gilds furnish abundant
-evidence that women then took an active part in
-their husbands’s trades; thus in 1297 the Craft of
-Fullers at Lincoln ordered that “none [of the craft]
-shall work at the wooden bar with a woman, unless
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_158'>158</span>with the wife of a master or her handmaid,”<a id='r302' /><a href='#f302' class='c021'><sup>[302]</sup></a> and
-in 1372, when articles were drawn up for the Leather-sellers
-and Pouch-makers of London, and for Dyers
-serving those trades, the wives of the dyers of
-leather were sworn together with their husbands
-“to do their calling, and, to the best of their power,
-faithfully to observe the things in the said petition
-contained; namely John Blakthorne, and Agnes,
-his wife; John Whitynge, and Lucy, his wife; and
-Richard Westone, dier, and Katherine, his wife.”<a id='r303' /><a href='#f303' class='c021'><sup>[303]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The craft Gilds had either disappeared before the
-seventeenth century or had developed into Companies,
-wealthy corporations differing widely from the earlier
-associations of craftsmen. But though the Companies
-were capitalistic in their tendencies, they retained
-many traditions and customs which were characteristic
-of the Gilds. The master’s place of business
-was still in many instances within the precincts of
-his home, and when this was the case his wife retained
-her position as mistress. Incidental references often
-show the wife by her husband’s side in his shop.
-Thus Thomas Symonds, Stationer, when called as a
-witness to an inquest in 1514 describes how “within
-a quarter of an hower after VII. a clock in the morning,
-Charles Joseph came before him at his stall and said
-‘good morow, goship Simondes,’ and the said Simonds
-said ‘good morow’ to hym againe, and the wife of
-the said Simons was by him, and because of the
-deadly countenance and hasty goinge of Charles,
-the said Thomas bad his wife looke whether Charles
-goeth, and as she could perceue, Charles went into
-an ale house.”<a id='r304' /><a href='#f304' class='c021'><sup>[304]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Decker describes a craftsman’s household in “A
-Shoemaker’s Holiday.” The mistress goes in and out
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_159'>159</span>of the workshop, giving advice, whether it is wanted
-or not.</p>
-
-<p class='c041'><i>Firk</i>: “Mum, here comes my dame and my master.
-She’ll scold, on my life, for loitering this
-Monday; ...”</p>
-<p class='c041'><i>Hodge</i>: “Master, I hope you will not suffer my
-dame to take down your journeyman....”</p>
-<p class='c041'><i>Eyre</i>: “Peace, Firk; not I, Hodge; ... she
-shall not meddle with you ... away,
-queen of clubs; quarrel not with me and
-my men, with me and my fine Firk; I’ll
-firk you, if you do.”<a id='r305' /><a href='#f305' class='c021'><sup>[305]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>But the meddling continues to the end of the play.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The same sort of scene is again described in “The
-Honest Whore,” where Viola, the Linen Draper’s
-wife, comes into his shop, and says to the two Prentices
-and George the servant, who are at work,</p>
-
-<p class='c042'>“Come, you put up your wares in good order,
-here, do you not, think you? One piece
-cast this way, another that way! You had
-need have a patient master indeed.”</p>
-<p class='c041'><i>George replies</i> (aside) “Ay, I’ll be sworn, for we
-have a curst mistress.”<a id='r306' /><a href='#f306' class='c021'><sup>[306]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Comedy is concerned with the foibles of humanity,
-and so here the faults of the mistress are reflected,
-but in real life she is often alluded to as her husband’s
-invaluable lieutenant. There can be no doubt that
-admission to the world of business and the responsibilities
-which rested on their shoulders, often developed
-qualities in seventeenth century women which the
-narrower opportunities afforded them in modern society
-have left dormant. The wide knowledge of life
-acquired by close association with their husbands’ affairs,
-qualified mothers for the task of training their children;
-but it was not only the mother who benefited by the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_160'>160</span>incorporation of business with domestic affairs, for
-while she shared her husband’s experiences he became
-acquainted with family life in a way which is impossible
-for men under modern conditions. The father was
-not separated from his children, but they played around
-him while he worked, and his spare moments could be
-devoted to their education. Thus the association
-of husband and wife brought to each a wider, deeper
-understanding of human life.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Returning to the position of women in the Craft
-Gilds and the later Companies, it must be remembered
-that originally these associations had a three-fold
-purpose, (<i>a</i>) the performance of religious ceremonies,
-(<i>b</i>) social functions, (<i>c</i>) the protection of trade interests
-and the maintenance of a high standard of
-technical efficiency.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Women are not excluded from membership by
-any of the earlier charters, which, in most cases
-expressly mention sisters as well as brothers, but references
-to them are more frequent in the provisions
-relating to the social and religious functions of the
-Gild than in those concerning technical matters.
-Though after the Reformation the performance
-of religious ceremonies fell into abeyance, social
-functions continued to be an important feature of
-the Companies.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Entrance was obtained by apprenticeship, patrimony,
-redemption or, in the case of women, by marriage.
-The three former methods though open to women,
-were seldom used by them, and the vast majority
-of the sisters obtained their freedom through marriage.
-During the husband’s life time their position is not
-very evident, but on his death they were possessed
-of all his trade privileges. The extent to which
-widows availed themselves of these privileges varied
-in different trades, but custom appears always to
-have secured to the widow, rather than to the son,
-the possession of her husband’s business.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_161'>161</span>Hitherto few records of the Gilds and Companies
-have been printed <i>in extenso</i>; possibly when others
-are published more light may be shed on the position
-which they accorded to women. The Stationers
-and the Carpenters are selected here, not because
-they are typical in their dealings with women, but
-merely because their records are available in a more
-complete form than the others.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The Stationers’ Company included Stationers,
-Booksellers, Binders and Printers; apprenticeship
-to either of these trades conferred the right of freedom
-in the company, but the position of printer was a
-prize which could not be attained purely by apprenticeship;
-before the Long Parliament this privilege
-was confined to twenty-two Printing Houses
-only besides the Royal Printers, vacancies being filled
-up by the Court of Assistants, with the approval
-of the Archbishop of Canterbury. Any stationer
-who had been made free of his Company might
-publish books, but printing was strictly limited
-to these twenty-two houses. A vacancy seldom
-occurred, because, according to the old English custom,
-on the printer’s death his rights were retained by his
-widow, and in this Company they were not even
-alienated when she married again, but were shared
-by her second husband; thus a printer’s widow,
-whatever her age might be, was regarded as a most
-desirable “partie.” The widow Francis Simson
-married in succession Richard Read and George
-Elde, the business following her, and Anne Barton
-married a second, third and fourth time,<a id='r307' /><a href='#f307' class='c021'><sup>[307]</sup></a> none of
-the later husbands being printers.</p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Though amongst the printers the line of descent
-appears to have been more often from husband to
-wife and wife to husband than from father to son,
-a list, giving the names of the master printers as they
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_162'>162</span>succeeded each other from 1575 to 1635 shows that
-the business was acquired by marrying the printer’s
-widow, by purchase from her, and also by descent.
-Four women are mentioned:—William Ells bound
-to Mrs. East, a printer’s widow who, having left the
-trade many years was brought up in the art of printing
-by Mr. Fletcher upon composition. Mrs. Griffyn
-had two apprentices, Mrs. Dawson had three apprentices
-and Mrs. Purslow two apprentices.<a id='r308' /><a href='#f308' class='c021'><sup>[308]</sup></a> Another
-list made in 1630 of the names of the Master Printers
-of London gives twenty-one men and three women,
-namely—Widdow Alde, Widdow Griffin, and “Widdow
-Sherleaker lives by printing of pictures.”<a id='r309' /><a href='#f309' class='c021'><sup>[309]</sup></a> In 1634
-the names of twenty-two printers are given, among
-whom are the following women—“Mr. William
-Jones succeeded Rafe Blore and paies a stipend to
-his wife ... neuer admitted.”</p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Mistris [ ] Alde, widdowe of Edward Alde
-[who] deceased about 10 yeeres since, (but she
-keepes her trade by her sonne who was Ra[lph]
-joyners sonne) neuer Admitted, neither capable of
-Admittance.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Mistris [ ] Dawson widow of John Dawson
-deceased about a yeere since [he] succeeded his vnkle
-Thomas Dawson about 26 yeers since ... never
-admitted neither capeable, (she hath a sonne about
-19 yeares old, bredd to ye trade).</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Mistris [ ] Pursloe widdow of George Pursloe
-who succeeded Simon Stafford about 5 yeeres since
-[she was] never admitted neither capeable. (haviland,
-Yo[u]ng and fletcher haue this.)</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Mistris [ ] Griffin widdow of Edward Griffin
-[who] succeeded Master [Melchisedeck] Bradwood
-about 18 yeeres since [she was] never admitted neither
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_163'>163</span>capable. (she hath a sonne.) (haviland, Yo[u]ng
-and fletcher have this yet).<a id='r310' /><a href='#f310' class='c021'><sup>[310]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Men as well as women in the list are noted as
-“never admitted neither capable of admittance.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Whether these women took an active part in the
-management of the business which they thus acquired
-or whether they merely drew the profits, leaving the
-management to others, is not clear. From the notes
-to the above list it would appear that they often
-followed the latter course, but elsewhere women are
-mentioned who are evidently taking an active part
-in the printing business. For example, an entry
-in the Stationers Register states at a time when Marsh
-and Vautrollier had the sole printing of school books
-“It is agreed that Thomas Vautrollier his wife shall
-finish this present impression which shee is in hand
-withall in her husband’s absence, of Tullie’s Epistles
-with Lambini’s annotations.”<a id='r311' /><a href='#f311' class='c021'><sup>[311]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>After his death Vautrollier’s widow printed one book
-but immediately after, on March 4th, 1587-8, the
-Court of Assistants ordered that “Mrs. Vautrollier,
-late wife of Thomas Vautrollier deceased, shall not
-hereafter print any manner of book or books whatsoever,
-as well by reason that her husband was noe
-printer at the time of his decease, as alsoe by the decrees
-sette downe in the Starre Chamber she is debarred
-from the same.” This order is inexplicable, as other
-printers’ widows exercised their husbands’ business,
-and Thomas Vautrollier’s name is duly given in the
-order of succession from Master Printers. Possibly
-the business had been transferred to her daughter,
-who married Field, their apprentice. Field died
-in 1625, his widow continuing the business.<a id='r312' /><a href='#f312' class='c021'><sup>[312]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_164'>164</span>Among thirty-nine printing patents issued by
-James I. and Charles II. is one to “Hester Ogden,
-als ffulke Henr. Sibbald <i>et</i> Tho. Kenithorpe for
-printing a book called The Sincire and True Translation
-of the Holy Scripture into the Englishe tounge.”
-It appears as though Hester Ogden was no mere
-figure head, for His Majesty’s Printers appealed
-against this licence on the grounds that it infringed
-their rights, protesting that “Mistris Ogden a maried
-woman one of Dr. Fulkes daughters did lately [sue]
-his Majestie to haue ye printing of her fathers workes,
-which his [Majestie] not knowing ye premises
-granted, and ye same being first referred [to the]
-Archbishop of Canterbury ... their lordships
-... deliuered their opinion against her,
-since which she hath gotten a new reference to
-the Lord Chancellor and Master Secretary Nanton,
-who not examining yᵉ title vpon oath and the Stationers
-being not then able to produce those materiall proofes
-which now they can their honors certified for her,
-wherevpon her friends hath his Majestie’s grant
-for ye printing and selling of the sayed book for
-xxi. years to her vse.... Mistris Ogden
-hath gotten by begging from ye clergy and others
-diuers great somes of money towards ye printing
-of her fathers workes. Master Norton and myself
-haue for many £1000 bought ye office of his
-Majesties printer to which ye printing of ye translacons
-of the Bible or any parts thereof sett furth by the
-State belongs. Now the greatest parte of Dr.
-Fulkes worke is the new testament in English sett
-forth by authoritie.”<a id='r313' /><a href='#f313' class='c021'><sup>[313]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Another patent was granted to Helen Mason
-for “printing and selling the abridgment of
-the book of martyres,”<a id='r314' /><a href='#f314' class='c021'><sup>[314]</sup></a> while Jane, wife
-of Sir Thomas Bludder, petitions Archbishop
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_165'>165</span>Laud, showing that “She with John Bill an infant
-have by grant from the King the moiety of the office
-of King’s Printer and amongst other things the printing
-of Bibles. This is infringed by a printer in Scotland,
-who printed many Bibles there and imported them
-into England ... she prays the Archbishop
-to hear the case himself.”<a id='r315' /><a href='#f315' class='c021'><sup>[315]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Many of the books printed at this time bear the
-names of women printers,<a id='r316' /><a href='#f316' class='c021'><sup>[316]</sup></a> but though women might
-own and direct the printing houses, there is no indication
-that they were ever engaged in the manual
-processes of printing. The printers’ trade does in
-fact furnish rather a good example of the effect upon
-women’s economic position of the transition from
-family industry to capitalistic organisation. It is true
-that many links in the evolution must be supplied
-by the imagination. We can imagine the master
-printer with his press, working at home with the
-help of his apprentice, his wife and children; then
-as his trade prospered he employed journeymen
-printers who were the real craftsmen, and it became
-possible for the owner of the business to be a man or
-woman who had never been bred up to the
-trade.</p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Apprenticeship was still exacted for the journeymen.
-A Star Chamber decree in 1637 provides
-that no “master printer shall imploy either to worke
-at the Case, or the Presse, or otherwise about his
-printing, any other person or persons, then such
-only as are Freemen, or Apprentices to the Trade
-or mystery of Printing.”<a id='r317' /><a href='#f317' class='c021'><sup>[317]</sup></a> While in 1676 the Stationers’
-Company ordained that “no master-printer, or
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_166'>166</span>other printer or workman ... shall teach,
-direct or instruct any person or persons whatsoever,
-other than his or their own legitimate son or sons,
-in this Art or Mystery of Printing, who is not actually
-bound as an Apprentice to some lawful authorised
-Printer.”<a id='r318' /><a href='#f318' class='c021'><sup>[318]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>From the omission here of any mention of
-daughters it is clear that the Master Printers’
-women-folk did not concern themselves with the
-technical side of his trade; but some attempt was
-evidently made to use other girls in the unskilled
-processes, for on a petition being presented in 1635
-by the younger printers, concerning abuses which
-they wished removed, the Stationers’ Company
-adopted the following recommendation, “That no
-Master Printer shall hereafter permit or suffer by
-themselves or their journeyman any Girles, Boyes,
-or others to take off anie sheets from the tinpin of
-the presse, but hee that pulleth at the presse shall
-take off every sheete himself.”<a id='r319' /><a href='#f319' class='c021'><sup>[319]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The young printers were successful in their efforts
-to preserve the monopoly value of their position,
-and formed an organisation amongst themselves to
-protect their interests against the masters; but in
-this association the wives of the young printers
-found no place. They could no longer help
-their husbands who were working, not at home,
-but on the master’s premises; and as girls were not
-usually apprenticed to the printing trade women were
-now virtually excluded from it.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Some imagination is needed to realise the social
-results of the change thus effected by capitalistic
-organisation on the economic position of married
-women, for no details have been discovered of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_167'>167</span>printers’ domestic circumstances; but as the wife
-was clearly unable to occupy herself with her husband’s
-trade, neither she nor her daughters could share
-the economic privileges which he won for himself
-and his fellows by his organising ability. If his
-wages were sufficiently high for her to devote
-herself to household affairs, she became his unpaid
-domestic servant, depending entirely on his
-goodwill for the living of herself and her children;
-otherwise she must have conducted a business on her own
-account, or obtained work as a wage-earner, in neither
-case receiving any protection from her husband in the
-competition of the labour market.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The wives and widows of the Masters were meanwhile
-actively engaged in other branches of the
-Stationers’ Company. In a list of Publishers covering
-the years 1553-1640, nearly ten per cent. of the names
-given are those of women, probably all of whom were
-widows.<a id='r320' /><a href='#f320' class='c021'><sup>[320]</sup></a> One of these, the widow of Francis Coldock,
-married in 1603 Isaac Binge, the Master of the Company.
-“She had three husbands, all Bachelors and
-Stationers, and died 1616, and is buried in St. Andrew
-Undershaft in a vault with Symon Burton her father.”<a id='r321' /><a href='#f321' class='c021'><sup>[321]</sup></a>
-The names of these women can be found also in the
-books they published. For example “The True
-Watch and Rule of Life” by John Brinsley the elder,
-printed by H. Lownes for Joyce Macham, <i>7th ed.</i>
-1615, the eighth edition being printed for her
-by T. Beale in 1619, and “an Epistle ... upon
-the present pestilence” by Henoch Clapham, was
-printed by T.C. for the Widow Newbery, London,
-1603. A woman who was a Binder is referred to
-in an order made by the Bishop of London in 1685
-“to damask ... counterfeit Primmirs’
-seized at Mrs. Harris’s Binder,”<a id='r322' /><a href='#f322' class='c021'><sup>[322]</sup></a> and Women are
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_168'>168</span>also met with as booksellers. Anne Bowler
-sold the book “Catoes Morall Distichs” ...
-printed by Annes Griffin. The Quakers at Horsley
-Down paid to Eliz. ffoulkes 3<i>s.</i> for their minute book,<a id='r323' /><a href='#f323' class='c021'><sup>[323]</sup></a>
-while Pepys’ bookseller was a certain Mrs. Nicholls.<a id='r324' /><a href='#f324' class='c021'><sup>[324]</sup></a>
-The death of Edward Croft, Bookseller, is recorded
-in Smyth’s <i>Obituary</i>, “his relict, remarried since
-to Mr. Blagrave, an honest bookseller, who live
-hapily in her house in Little Britain.”<a id='r325' /><a href='#f325' class='c021'><sup>[325]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The trade of a bookseller was followed by women in the provinces as
-well as in London, the Howards paying “For books bought of Eliz.
-Sturton iijs.”<a id='r326' /><a href='#f326' class='c021'><sup>[326]</sup></a> and Sir John Foulis enters in his account book
-“To Ard. Hissops relict and hir husband for 3 paper bookes at 10 gr.
-p. peice and binding other 4 bookes, 18. 14. 0 [Scots money], to them
-for a gramer and a salust to the bairns, 1.2.0. She owes me 6/8. of
-change.”<a id='r327' /><a href='#f327' class='c021'><sup>[327]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Presumably all the women who were engaged
-in either of these allied trades in London were free
-of the Stationers’ Company, and in most cases they
-were widows. Many apprentices were made free
-on the testimony of a woman,<a id='r328' /><a href='#f328' class='c021'><sup>[328]</sup></a> and though these
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_169'>169</span>in some cases may have almost completed their servitude
-before the death of their master, “Mistris
-Woolff” gives testimony for one apprentice in 1601,
-and for another in 1603, showing that she at least
-continued the management of her husband’s business
-for some years, and as she received a new apprentice
-during this time,<a id='r329' /><a href='#f329' class='c021'><sup>[329]</sup></a> it is evident that she had no
-intention of relinquishing it.</p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>When on her husband’s death the widow transferred
-an apprentice to some other master we may infer
-that she felt unable to take the charge of business
-upon her. This happened not infrequently, “Robert
-Jackson late apprentise with Raffe Jackson is putt
-ouer by consent of his mystres unto master Burby to
-serve out the Residue of his terms of apprentishood
-with him, the Last yere excepted.... Anthony
-Tomson ... hath putt him self an apprentice
-to master Gregorie Seton ... for 8 yeres....
-Eliz. Hawes shall haue the services
-and benefit of this Apprentise during her wydohed
-or marrying one of the Company capable of him.”<a id='r330' /><a href='#f330' class='c021'><sup>[330]</sup></a>
-“John leonard apprentise to Edmond Bolifant
-deceased is putt ouer by the consent of the said mary
-Bolyfant unto Richard Bradocke ... to serue
-out the residue of his apprentiship.”<a id='r331' /><a href='#f331' class='c021'><sup>[331]</sup></a> But whether
-the widow wished to continue the business as a “going
-concern” or not, she, and she only, was in possession
-of the privileges connected therewith, for she was
-virtually her husband’s partner, and his death did
-not disturb her possession. The old rule of copyright
-recognised her position, providing “that copies
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_170'>170</span>peculiar for life to any person should not be granted
-to any other but the Widow of the deceased”, she
-certifying the title of the book to the Master and
-Wardens, and entering the book in the “bookes
-of thys Company.”<a id='r332' /><a href='#f332' class='c021'><sup>[332]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The history of the Carpenters’ Company resembles
-that of the Stationers’ in some respects, though
-the character of a carpenter’s employment, which was
-so often concerned with building operations, carried
-on away from his shop, did not favour the continuance
-of his wife in the business after his death. The
-“Boke” of the ordinances of the Brotherhood of the
-Carpenters of London, dated 1333, shows the Society
-to have been at that time a Brotherhood formed “of
-good men carpenters of men and women” for common
-religious observances and mutual help in poverty
-and sickness, partaking of the nature of a Benefit
-Society rather than a Trade Union. The Brotherhood
-was at the same time a Sisterhood, and Brethren
-and Sisters are mentioned together in all but two of
-its articles. In the later code of ordinances, of which
-a copy has been preserved dated 1487, sisters are but
-twice mentioned, when tapers are prescribed at the
-burying of their bodies and prayers for the resting
-of their souls.<a id='r333' /><a href='#f333' class='c021'><sup>[333]</sup></a> Women’s names seldom occur in
-the Records, apart from entries connected with those
-who were tenants, or charitable grants to widows
-fallen into poverty, or with payments to the Bedell’s
-wife for washing tablecloths and napkins.<a id='r334' /><a href='#f334' class='c021'><sup>[334]</sup></a> In one
-instance considerable trouble was experienced because
-the Bedell’s wife would not turn out of their house after
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_171'>171</span>the Bedell’s death. In September, 1567, “it is agreed
-and fullie determyned by the Mʳ wardeins &amp; assystaunce
-of this company that Syslie burdon wydowe late wife
-of Richard burdon dwelling wᵗʰin this house at the
-will &amp; pleasure of the foresaid Mʳ &amp; wardeins shall
-quyetlye &amp; peaceablye dept out of &amp; from her now
-dwellinge at Xpistmas next or before &amp; at her departure
-to have the some of Twentie six shillinges &amp; eight
-pence of Lawfull money of England in reward.”<a id='r335' /><a href='#f335' class='c021'><sup>[335]</sup></a>
-Syslie Burdon however did not wish to move, and in
-the following February another entry occurs “at
-this courte it is agreed further that Cysley burdon
-wydowe at the feast daye of thannunciacon of oʳ
-Ladie Sᵗ marye the virgin next ensueng the date
-abovesayd shall dept. &amp; goe from her nowe dwellinge
-house wherein she now dwelleth wᵗʰ in this hall &amp; at
-the same tyme shall have at her deptur if she doethe
-of her owne voyd wᵗʰout anye further troublynge
-of the Mʳ and wardeins of this house at that
-p’sent tyme the some of Twentie six shillinges eightpense
-in reward.”<a id='r336' /><a href='#f336' class='c021'><sup>[336]</sup></a> Cyslie Burdon may have believed
-that as a widow she had a just claim to the house,
-for leases granted by the Company at this time were
-usually for the life of the tenant and his wife.<a id='r337' /><a href='#f337' class='c021'><sup>[337]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Women accompanied their husbands to the Company
-dinners as a matter of course. In 1556 “the
-clothyng” are ordered to pay for “ther dynner at
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_172'>172</span>the Dynner day ijs. vji<i>d.</i> a man whether ther wyffes
-or they themselves come or no.”<a id='r338' /><a href='#f338' class='c021'><sup>[338]</sup></a> But the entries
-do not suggest that the position of equal sisters which
-they held in the days of the old “Boke” was maintained.
-Women made presents to the Company.
-“Mistrys ellis,” the wife of one of the masters of
-the Company, presented “a sylv̄ pott ꝑsell gylt
-the q̄ter daye at candylmas wayeing viij ozes &amp;
-a qter.”<a id='r339' /><a href='#f339' class='c021'><sup>[339]</sup></a> This apparently was in memory of her
-deceased husband, for in the same year she “turned over”
-an apprentice, and in 1564 a fine was paid by Richard
-Smarte “for not comyng at yᵉ owre appoynted to
-mistris Ellis beriall—xiji<i>d.</i>”<a id='r340' /><a href='#f340' class='c021'><sup>[340]</sup></a> Neither the existence
-of these two instances, which show a lively interest
-in the Company, nor the absence of other references
-can be taken as conclusive evidence one way or another
-concerning the social position of the sisters in the
-Company. Among the many judgments passed
-on brothers for reviling each other, using “ondecent
-words,” etc., etc., only once is a woman fined for this
-offence, when in 1556 the warden enters in his account
-book “Resd of frances stelecrag a fyne for yll wordes
-that his wyffe gave to John Dorrant ijˢ—Resd of John
-Dorrant for yll wordes that he gave to Mystris frances
-xvjᵈ—Resd of Wyllam Mortym̃ a fyne for callyng
-of Mystris frances best ijˢ.”<a id='r341' /><a href='#f341' class='c021'><sup>[341]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>It is certain that the wives of carpenters, like the
-wives of other tradesmen, shared the business
-anxieties of their husbands, the help they rendered
-being most often in buying and selling. This
-activity is reflected in some rules drawn up to regulate
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_173'>173</span>the purchase of timber. In 1554 “yᵗ was agreyd
-be the Master &amp; wardyns and the moste parte of the
-assestens that no woman shall come to the waters
-to by tymber bourde lath q̄ters ponchons gystes &amp;
-Raffters ther husbandes beyng in the town uppon
-payne to forfyt at ëvry tyme so fownd.”<a id='r342' /><a href='#f342' class='c021'><sup>[342]</sup></a> The
-Company’s decision was not readily obeyed, for
-on March 8th, 1547, “the Master and the Wardyns
-wᵗ partt of the Assestens went to the gyldehall to
-have had a Redresse for the women that came to the
-watersyde to by stuffe,”<a id='r343' /><a href='#f343' class='c021'><sup>[343]</sup></a> and on March 10th “was
-called in John Armestrong, Wyllyam boner, Wyllyam
-Watson, John Gryffyn and Henry Wrest there having
-amonyssion to warne ther wyffes that they schulde
-not by no stuffe at the waters syd upone payne
-of a fyne.”<a id='r344' /><a href='#f344' class='c021'><sup>[344]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>On her husband’s death the carpenter’s wife generally
-retired from business, transferring her apprentices for
-a consideration to another master. That this
-practice was not universal is shown in the case of
-a boy who had been apprenticed to Joseph
-Hutchinson and was “turned over to Anne Hayward,
-widow, relict of Richard Hayward Carpentar.”<a id='r345' /><a href='#f345' class='c021'><sup>[345]</sup></a>
-Mrs. Hayward must clearly have been actively prosecuting
-her late husband’s business. The women
-who “make free” apprentices seem generally to
-have done so within a few months of their husband’s
-deaths. That the Company recognised the right
-of women to retain apprentices if they chose is shown
-by the following provision in Statutes dated November
-10th, 1607. “If any Apprentice or Apprentices
-Marry or Absent themselves from their Master or
-Mistress During their Apprenticehood, then within
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_174'>174</span>one month the Master or Mistress is to Bring their
-Indentures to the hall to be Registered and Entered,
-etc.” “None to Receive or take into their service
-or house any Man or Woman’s Apprentice Covenant
-Servant or Journeyman within the limits aforesaid,
-etc.”<a id='r346' /><a href='#f346' class='c021'><sup>[346]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>When a carpenter’s widow could keep her husband’s
-business together, no one disputed her right to
-receive apprentices. Several instances of their doing
-so are recorded towards the end of the century.<a id='r347' /><a href='#f347' class='c021'><sup>[347]</sup></a> The
-right to succeed her husband in his position as carpenter
-and member of the worshipful company was immediately
-allowed when claimed by a widow; thus the
-court “agreed ... that Johan burton wydowe
-late wife of [ ] burton citezein and Carpenter of
-London for that warninge hathe not ben goven unto
-her from tyme to tyme at the Quarterdaies heretofore
-From henseforthe shall have due warninge goven unto
-her everye Quarterdaye and at the next Quarterdaie
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_175'>175</span>she shall paye in discharge of tharrerages behind Twelve
-pence &amp; so shall paye her Quateridge (pᵈ xiji<i>d.</i>)”<a id='r348' /><a href='#f348' class='c021'><sup>[348]</sup></a>;
-a year later “burtons widow” makes free an
-apprentice Mighell Pattinson.<a id='r349' /><a href='#f349' class='c021'><sup>[349]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Curiously enough, during the period 1654 to 1670,
-twenty-one girls were bound apprentice at Carpenters’
-Hall. Probably none of these expected to learn the
-trade of a carpenter.<a id='r350' /><a href='#f350' class='c021'><sup>[350]</sup></a> Nine were apprenticed to
-Richard Hill and his wife, who lived first near St.
-Michael’s, Cornehill,<a id='r351' /><a href='#f351' class='c021'><sup>[351]</sup></a> and afterwards against Trinity
-Minories.<a id='r352' /><a href='#f352' class='c021'><sup>[352]</sup></a> They were apprenticed for seven years
-to learn the trade of a sempstress, and probably in
-each case a heavy premium was paid, a note being
-made against the name of Prudentia Cooper, who was
-bound in 1664 “(obligatur Pater in 50ˡ pro ventute
-apprenticij).”<a id='r353' /><a href='#f353' class='c021'><sup>[353]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Richard Hill’s wife’s name is included in the Indentures
-three times, and in 1672 a boy was apprenticed
-to “Ric. Hill Civi <i>et</i> Carpenter London necnon de
-little Minories Silk Winder.”<a id='r354' /><a href='#f354' class='c021'><sup>[354]</sup></a> We may infer that
-Mrs. Hill had founded the business before or after
-her marriage with the carpenter, and that hers proving
-profitable the husband had been satisfied with working
-for wages, while retaining the freedom of the Company,
-or had transferred his services to his wife’s business,
-adding that of a Silk winder to it. One girl originally
-apprenticed to Henry Joyse was “turned over to
-Anne Joyse sempstress &amp; sole merchant without
-Thomas Joyse her husband,”<a id='r355' /><a href='#f355' class='c021'><sup>[355]</sup></a> five were apprenticed
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_176'>176</span>to Henry Joyce to learn the trade of a milliner. No
-mention is made of his wife, but as he received boy
-apprentices also,<a id='r356' /><a href='#f356' class='c021'><sup>[356]</sup></a> it may be supposed that in fact
-the two trades of a carpenter and a milliner were
-carried on in this case simultaneously by him and his
-wife. The blending of these two trades is noted
-again in the case of Samuel Joyce;<a id='r357' /><a href='#f357' class='c021'><sup>[357]</sup></a> the trade the
-other girls were to learn is not generally specified,
-but Rebecca Perry was definitely apprenticed to
-William Addington “to learne the Art of a Sempstress
-of his wife.”<a id='r358' /><a href='#f358' class='c021'><sup>[358]</sup></a> Two girls were apprenticed to “Thome
-Clarke ... London Civi et Carpenter ad
-discend artem de Child’s Coate seller existen. art.
-uxoris sue pro septem annis.”<a id='r359' /><a href='#f359' class='c021'><sup>[359]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Elizabeth Lambert, the daughter of Thomas Lambert,
-formerly of London, silkeman, was apprenticed
-in 1678 to Rebecca Cooper, widow of Thomas Cooper,
-“Civis Carpenter London,” for seven years.<a id='r360' /><a href='#f360' class='c021'><sup>[360]</sup></a> Another
-girl who had been apprenticed to this same woman
-in 1668 applied for her freedom in 1679, which was
-granted, though apparently her request was an unusual
-one, the records stating that “Certaine Indentures
-of Apprentiship were made whereby Rebecca
-Gyles, daughter of James Gyles of Staines, ...
-was bound Apprentice to Rebecca Cooper of the
-parish of St. Buttolph without Aldgate widdow for
-seaven yeares ... this day att a Court of
-assistants then holden for this Company came Rebecca
-Gylles Spinster sometime servant to Rebecca Cooper
-a free servant of this Company, and complained that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_177'>177</span>haveing served her said Mistres faithfully a Terme
-of seaven years whᶜʰ expired the twenty-fourth day
-of June, 1675, and often desired of her said Mistris
-Testimony of her service to the end shee might bee
-made free, her said Mistres had hitherto denyed the
-same; &amp; then presented credible persons within
-this Citty to testifie the truth of her said service,
-desireing to bee admitted to the freedome of this
-Company, which this Table thought reasonable, vnlesse
-the said Rebecca Cooper, her said Mistres on notice
-hereof to bee given, shall shew reasonable cause to
-the contrary, etc.”<a id='r361' /><a href='#f361' class='c021'><sup>[361]</sup></a> Encouraged by the success of
-this application, two other girls followed Rebecca
-Gyles’ example, one being presented for her freedom
-at Carpenters’ Hall by Thomas Clarke in 1683 and
-another by Henry Curtis in 1684.<a id='r362' /><a href='#f362' class='c021'><sup>[362]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Thus it may be presumed that apprenticeship
-to a brother or sister of the Carpenters’ Company
-conferred the right of freedom upon any girls who
-chose to avail themselves of the privilege, even when
-the trade actually learnt was not that of carpentry.
-Amongst the girl apprentices only one other was
-directly bound to a woman, namely “Elizabetha
-filia Hester Eitchus ux. Geo. Eitchus nuper Civi
-et Carpentar. pon se dict Hester matri pro septem
-ann a dat etc.”<a id='r363' /><a href='#f363' class='c021'><sup>[363]</sup></a> Although Hester Eitchus is here
-called “uxor” she must really have been a widow, for
-her name would not have appeared alone on the
-indenture during her husband’s lifetime; boy apprentices
-had previously been bound to him, and no doubt
-as in the other cases husband and wife had been
-prosecuting their several trades simultaneously, the
-wife retaining her membership in the Carpenters’
-Company when left a widow. An independent
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_178'>178</span>business must have been very necessary for the wife
-in cases where the husband worked for wages, and not
-on his own account, for in 1563 carpenter’s wages
-were fixed “be my lorde mayors commandement ...
-yf they dyd fynde themselves meat and drynke
-at xiiijᵈ the day and their servants xijᵈ. Itm otherwises
-the sayd carpynters to have viijᵈ the day wayges
-meat &amp; drynke &amp; their servants vjᵈ meat &amp; drynke.”<a id='r364' /><a href='#f364' class='c021'><sup>[364]</sup></a>
-These wages would have been inadequate for the
-maintenance of a family in London, and therefore
-unless the carpenter was in a position to employ
-apprentices and enter into contracts, in which case
-he could find employment also for his wife, she must
-have traded in some way on her own account.</p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>It is difficult to say how far the position of women
-in the Stationers’ and Carpenters’ Companies was
-typical of their position in the other great London
-Companies and in the Gilds and Companies which
-flourished or decayed in the provinces. All these
-organisations resembled each other in certain broad
-outlines, but varied considerably in details. All
-seem to have agreed in the early association of brothers
-and sisters on equal terms for social and religious
-purposes. Thus the Carpenters’ was “established
-one perpetual brotherhood, or guild ... to
-consist of one master, three wardens, and commonalty
-of freemen, of the Mystery of Carpentry ...
-and of the brethren and sisters of freemen of the
-said mystery.”<a id='r365' /><a href='#f365' class='c021'><sup>[365]</sup></a> The charter granted by Henry VI.
-to the Armourers and Braziers provided “that the
-brethren and sisters of that ffraternity or guild, ...
-should be of itself one perpetual community ...
-and have perpetual sucession. And that the brothers
-and sisters of the same ffraternity or guild, ...
-might choose and make one Master and two Wardens
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_179'>179</span>from among themselves; and also elect and make another
-Master and other Wardens into the office aforesaid,
-according to the ordinances of the better and worthier
-part of the same brethren and sisters....”<a id='r366' /><a href='#f366' class='c021'><sup>[366]</sup></a> In
-this case the sisters were regarded as active and
-responsible members but of the Merchant Taylors
-Clode says “It is clear that women were originally
-admitted as members and took apprentices; that it
-was customary in later years for women to dine or be
-present at the quarterly meetings is evidenced by a
-notice of their absence in 1603, ‘the upper table near
-to the garden, commonly called the <i>Mistris Table</i>,
-was furnished with sword bearer and gentlemen
-strangers, there being no gentlewomen at this Quarter
-Day.’ In many of the wills of early benefactors,
-sisters as well as brethren are named as ‘devisees.’
-Thus in Sibsay’s (1404) the devise is ‘to the Master
-and Wardens and brethren and sisters’....
-When an Almsman of the Livery married with the
-Company’s consent his widow remained during her
-life an almswoman, and was buried by the Company.
-In that sense she was treated as a sister of the
-fraternity, but she probably exercised no rights as a
-member of it.”<a id='r367' /><a href='#f367' class='c021'><sup>[367]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The sisters are often referred to in the rules relating to
-the dinners, which were such an important feature
-of gild life. The “Grocers” provided that “Every
-one of the Fraternity from thenceforward, that has
-a wife or companion, shall come to the feast, and bring
-with him a lady if he pleases; [et ameyne avec luy
-une demoiselle si luy plest] if they cannot come, for
-the reasons hereafter named, that is to say, sick,
-big with child, and near deliverance, without any
-other exception; and that every man shall pay for
-his wife 20<i>d.</i>; also, that each shall pay 5<i>s.</i>, that is
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_180'>180</span>to say, 20<i>d.</i> for himself, 20<i>d.</i> for his companion, and
-20<i>d.</i> for the priest. And that all women who are
-not of the Fraternity, and afterwards should be
-married to any of the Fraternity, shall be entered and
-looked upon as of the Fraternity for ever, and shall
-be assisted and made as one of us; and after the death
-of her husband, the widow shall come to the dinner,
-and pay 40<i>d.</i> if she is able. And if the said widow
-marries any one not of the Fraternity, she shall not
-be admitted to the said feast, nor have any assistance
-given her, as long as she remains so married, be whom
-she will; nor none of us ought to meddle or interfere
-in anything with her on account of the Fraternity,
-as long as she remains unmarried.”<a id='r368' /><a href='#f368' class='c021'><sup>[368]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The Wardens of the Merchant Gild at Beverley
-were directed to make in turn yearly “one dinner
-for all his bretherne and theire wieves.”<a id='r369' /><a href='#f369' class='c021'><sup>[369]</sup></a> The Pewterers
-decided that “every man and wif that comyth
-to the yemandries dynner sholde paye xvji<i>d.</i> And
-every Jorneyman that hath a wif ... xvjᵈ.
-And every lone man beinge a howsholder that
-comyth to dynner shall paye xijᵈ. and every
-Jorneyman having no wif and comyth to dynner
-shall paye viijᵈ. ... every man that hath
-bynne maryed wᵗʰin the same ij years shall geve his
-cocke or eƚƚe paye xijᵈ.... Provided always
-that none bringe his gest wᵗʰ him wᵗʰowt he paye for
-his dynner as moch as he paith for hymself and that
-they bring no childerne wᵗʰ them passing one &amp; no
-more.”<a id='r370' /><a href='#f370' class='c021'><sup>[370]</sup></a> In 1605 it was agreed that “ther shalbe
-called all the whole clothyng and ther wyves and
-the wydowes whose husbandes have byne of the
-clothynge and that shalbe payed ijs. man &amp; wyffe and
-the wydowes xiji<i>d.</i> a peece.”<a id='r371' /><a href='#f371' class='c021'><sup>[371]</sup></a> In 1672, the expense
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_181'>181</span>of entertaining becoming irksome, “an order of
-Coʳᵗ for ye abateing extraoʳdinary Feasting” was
-made, requiring the “Master &amp; Wardens ...
-to deposit each 12li &amp; spend yᵉ one half thereof upon
-the Masters &amp; Wardens ffeast this day held, and the
-Other moyety to be and remain to yᵉ Compᵃ use.
-Now this day the sᵈ Feast was kept but by reason of
-the women being invited yᵉ Charge of yᵉ Feast was
-soe extream that nothing could be cleered to yᵉ
-house according to yᵉ sᵈ order. There being Spent
-near 90li.”<a id='r372' /><a href='#f372' class='c021'><sup>[372]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Sisters are also remembered in the provisions
-made for religious observances and assistance in times
-of sickness. The ordinances of the Craft of the
-Glovers at Kingston-upon-Hull required that “every
-brother and syster of ye same craffᵗᵗ be at every
-offeryng within the sayd town with every brother
-or syster of the same crafftt as well at weddynges
-as at beryalles.” Brethren and sisters were to have
-lights at their decease, and if in poverty to have them
-freely.<a id='r373' /><a href='#f373' class='c021'><sup>[373]</sup></a> The “yoman taillours” made application
-“that they and others of their fraternity of yomen
-yearly may assemble ... near to Smithfield
-and make offerings for the souls of brethren and sister
-etc.”<a id='r374' /><a href='#f374' class='c021'><sup>[374]</sup></a> In the city of Chester, when a charter was
-given to joiners, carvers and turners to become a
-separate Company, not part of the Carpenters’
-as formerly, to be called the Company of the Joiners,
-it is said “Every brother of the said occupacions
-shall bee ready att all times ... to come
-unto ... the burial of every brother and
-sister of the said occupacions.”<a id='r375' /><a href='#f375' class='c021'><sup>[375]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Sisters must have played an important part in the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_182'>182</span>functions of the Merchant Taylors of Bristol, for an
-order was made in 1401 that “the said maister and
-iiii wardeyns schall ordeyne every yere good and
-convenient cloth of oon suyt for all brothers and sisters
-of the said fraternity....”<a id='r376' /><a href='#f376' class='c021'><sup>[376]</sup></a> The Charter
-of this Company provided that “ne man ne woman
-be underfange into the fraternite abovesaid withoute
-assent of the Keper and maister etc. ... and
-also that hit be a man or woman y knowe of good
-conversation and honeste.... Also y<sup>f</sup> eny
-brother other soster of thys fraternite above sayde
-that have trewly y payed hys deutes yat longeth to
-ye fraternite falle into poverte other into myschef
-and maie note travalle for to he be releved, he schal
-have of ye comune goodes every weke xxiᵈ of monei
-... and yf he be a man yat hath wyfe and chylde
-he schal trewly departe alle hys goodes bytwyne
-heir and hys wyfe and children; and ye partie that
-falleth to hym he schal trewly yeld up to ye mayster and
-to ye wardynes of the fraternite obove sayde, in ye
-maner to fore seide....” The brothers and
-sisters shall share in the funeral ceremonies, etc.,
-“also gif eny soster chyde with other openly in the
-strete, yat eyther schalle paye a pounde wex to ye
-lighte of the fraternite; and gif they feygte eyther
-schall paie twenty pounde wex to ye same lyte upon
-perryle of hir oth gif thei be in power. And gif
-eny soster by y proved a commune chider among her
-neygbourys after ones warnyng other tweies at the
-(delit) ye thridde tyme ye maister and ye wardeynes
-of ye fraternite schulle pute her out of ye compaynye
-for ever more.”<a id='r377' /><a href='#f377' class='c021'><sup>[377]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Chiding and reviling were failings common to all
-gilds, and were by no means confined to the
-sisters. The punishments appointed by the Merchant
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_183'>183</span>Gild at Beverley for those “who set up detractions,
-or rehearse past disputes, or unduly abuse”<a id='r378' /><a href='#f378' class='c021'><sup>[378]</sup></a> are for
-brothers only. And though it was “Agreed by the
-Mʳ Wardens and Assystaunce” of the Pewterers that
-“Robert west sholde bringe in his wif vpon ffrydaye
-next to reconsile her self to Mʳ Cacher and others
-of the Company for her naughty mysdemeanoʳ of
-her tonge towarde them,”<a id='r379' /><a href='#f379' class='c021'><sup>[379]</sup></a> the quarrelling among
-the Carpenters seems to have been almost confined to
-the men.</p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>There can be no doubt that the sisters shared fully
-in the social and religious life of the Gilds; it is also
-perfectly clear that the wife was regarded by the
-Gild or Company as her husband’s partner, and that,
-after his death she was confirmed in the possession
-of his business with his leases and apprentices at least
-during the term of her widowhood.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>But the extent to which she really worked with
-him in his trade and was qualified to carry it on as
-a going concern after his death is much more difficult
-to determine, varying as it did from trade to trade
-and depending so largely in each case upon the natural
-capacity of the individual woman concerned. The
-extent to which a married woman could work with
-her husband depended partly upon whether his
-trade was carried on at home or abroad. It has
-been suggested that the carpenters who often were
-engaged in building operations could not profit
-much by their wives’ assistance, but many trades
-which in later times have become entirely closed to
-women were then so dependent on their labour that
-sisters are mentioned specifically in rules concerning
-the conditions of manufacture. Thus the charter
-of the Armourers and Brasiers was granted in the
-seventeenth year of James I. “to the Master and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_184'>184</span>Wardens and Brothers and Sisters of the ffraternity
-... that from thenceforth All &amp; all manner
-of brass and copper works ... edged tools
-... small guns ... wrought by any
-person or persons being of the same ffraternity ...
-should be searched and approved ... by
-skilful Artificers of the said ffraternity.”<a id='r380' /><a href='#f380' class='c021'><sup>[380]</sup></a> Rules
-which were drawn up at Salisbury in 1612 provide that
-no free brother or sister shall “rack, set, or cause
-to be racked or set, any cloth upon any tenter, on the
-Sabbath day, under the forfeiture of 2<i>s.</i>” The Wardens
-of the Company of Merchants, Mercers, Grocers,
-Apothecaries, Goldsmiths, Drapers, Upholsterers, and
-Embroiderers were ordered to search the wares,
-merchandise, weights and measures of sisters as well
-as brothers.<a id='r381' /><a href='#f381' class='c021'><sup>[381]</sup></a> “No free brother or sister is at any time
-to put any horse leather into boots or shoes or any
-liquored calves leather into boots or shoes, to be
-sold between the feast of St. Bartholomew the Apostle
-and the Annunciation of the Virgin Mary....
-No free brother or sister is to keep or set up any standing
-in the market place, except in fair times. No
-brother or sister is to set open his or her shop, or to
-do any work, in making or mending of boots and
-shoes on the Sabbath day, on pain of twelve pence
-forfeit.”<a id='r382' /><a href='#f382' class='c021'><sup>[382]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Rules which specifically permit the employment
-of the master’s wife or daughter in his trade while
-excluding other unapprenticed persons, are in themselves
-evidence that they were often so employed.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_185'>185</span>Thus the Glovers allowed “noe brother of this
-ffraternity” to “take an apprentice vnder the full
-end and tearme of seaven years ffuly to be compleat
-... excepting brothers son or daughter....”<a id='r383' /><a href='#f383' class='c021'><sup>[383]</sup></a>
-No leatherseller might “put man, child or woman to
-work in the same mistery, if they be not bound
-apprentice, and inrolled in the same mistery; excepting
-their wives and children.”<a id='r384' /><a href='#f384' class='c021'><sup>[384]</sup></a> Similarly the Girdlers
-in 1344 ordered that “no one of the trade shall get
-any woman to work other than his wedded wife or
-daughter”<a id='r385' /><a href='#f385' class='c021'><sup>[385]</sup></a> while by a rule of the Merchant Taylors,
-Bristol “no person ... shall cutt make or sell
-any kynde of garment, garments, hose or breeches
-within ye saide cittie ... unles he be franchised
-and made free of the saide crafte (widdowes whose
-husbandes were free of ye saide crafte duringe
-the tyme of their wyddowhedd vsinge ye same
-with one Jorneyman and one apprentice only
-excepted).”<a id='r386' /><a href='#f386' class='c021'><sup>[386]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The association of women with their husbands in
-business matters is often suggested by the presence
-of both their names on indentures. Walter Beemer,
-for example, was apprenticed to John Castle of Marke
-and Johane his wife to be instructed and brought
-up in the trade of a tanner.<a id='r387' /><a href='#f387' class='c021'><sup>[387]</sup></a> Sometimes it is
-shown by the indifference with which money
-transactions are conducted either with husband or
-with wife. When the Corporation at Dorchester
-purchased a new mace in 1660, Mr. Sam White’s
-wife appears to have acted throughout in the matter.
-An entry in the records for 1660 states that “the silver
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_186'>186</span>upon the old maces ... comes unto iijˡⁱ.xviijˢ.iijᵈ,
-which was intended to bee delivered to Mr. Sam:
-White’s wife towards payment for the new Maces.... Mr. White hath it
-the 18th of January, 1660.” (Inserted later).</p>
-
-<p class='c043'>July 3rd, 1661.—pd. Mrs. White as appeareth forward — 5 0 0</p>
-<p class='c043'>October 4th, 1661.—pd. Mrs. White more as appeareth forward — 4 10 0</p>
-<p class='c043'>About Michaelmas, Mr. Sauage pd Mrs. White in dollers— 7 7 0</p>
-<p class='c043'>April 26th, 1661.—It is ordered and agreed that
-twenty shillings a man, which shall be lent and
-advanced to Mr. Samuel White’s wife by any
-of this Company towards payment for the Maces
-shall be repayed back to them.”<a id='r388' /><a href='#f388' class='c021'><sup>[388]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>An equal indifference is shown by the Carpenters’
-Company in making payments for their ale. Sometimes
-these are entered to William Whytte, but quite as
-often to “his wyffe.” For example in 1556 “Itm
-payd for Yest to Whytte’s wyffe iiijᵈ.”<a id='r389' /><a href='#f389' class='c021'><sup>[389]</sup></a> “Resd of
-Whytte’s wyffe her hole yere’s Rent in ale xxixˢ iiijᵈ.”<a id='r390' /><a href='#f390' class='c021'><sup>[390]</sup></a>
-“Itm payd to whytte’s wyffe for ale above the rent
-of hyr howsse iijˢ.vjᵈ.” “Itm payd to whytte’s
-wyffe for hopyng of tobbis xvjᵈ.”<a id='r391' /><a href='#f391' class='c021'><sup>[391]</sup></a> Finally, in 1559,
-when perhaps William Whytte had departed this
-life, it is entered “Resd of Mother whytte hole
-yeres rent xxixˢ vijᵈ.”<a id='r392' /><a href='#f392' class='c021'><sup>[392]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The Pewterers, in order to check stealing, ordered
-that “none of the sayde Crafte shall bye anye Leade of
-Tylers, Laborers, Masons, boyes, nor of women Nor of
-none such as shall seme to be a Suspect pson,” adding
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_187'>187</span>“that none of the sayde companye shalbe excusyd by his
-wif or servannte nor none other suche lyk excuse.”<a id='r393' /><a href='#f393' class='c021'><sup>[393]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Gild rules recognise the authority of the mistress
-over apprentices, the Clockmakers ordaining that
-“no servant or apprentice that ... hath
-without just and reasonable cause, departed from his
-master, mistress or dame, ... shall be admitted
-to work for himself,”<a id='r394' /><a href='#f394' class='c021'><sup>[394]</sup></a> while the charter of the
-Glass-sellers provides suitable punishment “if any
-apprentice ... shall misbehave himself towards
-his master or mistress ... or shall
-lie out of his master or mistress’s house without
-his or her privity.”<a id='r395' /><a href='#f395' class='c021'><sup>[395]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>When a man who belonged to Gild or Company
-died, his wife was free to continue his business
-under her own management, retaining her position
-as a free sister, or she might withdraw from
-trade and transfer her apprentices to another brother.
-In the Carpenters’ and some other trades the latter
-was the more usual course to follow; thus Thomas
-Mycock, a cutler, on taking over an apprentice who
-had served John Kay, deceased, six years, covenanted
-to pay Kay’s widow 20<i>s.</i> a year for the three remaining
-years,<a id='r396' /><a href='#f396' class='c021'><sup>[396]</sup></a> but on the other hand the widow Poynton
-was paid 15<i>s.</i> 7<i>d.</i> “for glass worke” by the Burgery
-of Sheffield;<a id='r397' /><a href='#f397' class='c021'><sup>[397]</sup></a> showing that she had not withdrawn
-from business on her husband’s death. It is clear
-that widows often lost their rights as sisters, if they
-took, as a second husband, a man who was not and did
-not become a brother of the same Gild. Thus there
-is an entry in the “Pewterers’ Records,” 1678,
-concerning “Mrs. Sicily Moore, formerly the wife of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_188'>188</span>Edward Fish, late member of this Compᵃ decđ, and
-since marryed to one Moore, a fforeignir, now also
-decđ, desired to be admitted into the ffreedome of
-this Compᵃ. After some debate the Court agreed
-and soe Ordered that she shall be received into the
-ffreedom of the Compᵃ Gratis, onely paying usuall
-ffees and this Condition that she shall not bind any
-app’ntice by virtue of the sᵈ Freedom.”<a id='r398' /><a href='#f398' class='c021'><sup>[398]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Instances occur in which an apprentice was discharged
-because “the wife, after the death of her Husband,
-taught him not.”<a id='r399' /><a href='#f399' class='c021'><sup>[399]</sup></a> The apprentice naturally brought
-forward this claim if by so doing there was a chance
-of shortening the term of his service, but he was not
-always successful. The Justices dismissed a case
-brought by Edward Steel, ordering him to serve
-Elizabeth Apprice, widow, the remainder of his
-term. He was apprenticed in 1684 to John Apprice
-Painter-Stainer for nine years; he had served seven
-years when his master died, and he now declares that
-Elizabeth, the widow, refuses to instruct him. She
-insists that since her husband’s death she has provided
-able workmen to instruct this apprentice, and
-that he was now capable of doing her good service.<a id='r400' /><a href='#f400' class='c021'><sup>[400]</sup></a>
-When the “widowe Holton prayed that she
-[being executor to her husband] maye have the benefitt
-of the service of Roger Jakes, her husband’s apprentice
-by Indenture, for the residue of the years to come,
-which he denyeth to performe, it was ordered that
-th’apprentice shall dwell and serve his dame duringe
-the residue of his terme, she providing for him as
-well work as other things fitt for him.”<a id='r401' /><a href='#f401' class='c021'><sup>[401]</sup></a> The
-Gilders having accused Richard Northy of having
-more than the just number of apprentices, he stated
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_189'>189</span>in his defence that the apprentice “was not any
-that was taken or bound by him, but was left unto
-him by express words in the will of his deceased
-mother-in-law whᶜʰ will, wᵗʰ the probate thereof,
-he now produced in court.”<a id='r402' /><a href='#f402' class='c021'><sup>[402]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The occurrence of widows’ names among the cases
-which came before the Courts for infringements
-of the Company’s rules is further evidence that they
-were actively engaged in business. “Two bundles
-of unmade girdles were taken from widows Maybury
-and Bliss, young widows they were ordered to
-pay 5<i>s.</i> each by way of fine for making and selling unlawful
-wares.”<a id='r403' /><a href='#f403' class='c021'><sup>[403]</sup></a> Richard Hewatt, of Northover in
-Glastonbury, fuller, when summoned to appear before
-the Somerset Quarter Sessions as a witness, refers
-to his dame Ursula Lance who had “lost 2 larrows
-worth five shillings and that Robert Marsh, one of
-the constables of Somerton Hundred, found in the
-house of William Wilmat the Larrows cloven in pieces
-and put in the oven, and the Rack-hookes that were
-in the larrows were found in the fire in the said house.”<a id='r404' /><a href='#f404' class='c021'><sup>[404]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Widows were very dependent upon the assistance
-of journeymen, and often chose a relation for this
-responsible position. At Reading “All the freeman
-Blacksmiths in this Towne complayne that one Edward
-Nitingale, a smith, beinge a forreynour, useth the trade
-of a blacksmith in this Corporacion to the great
-dammage of the freemen: it was answered that he is a
-journeyman to the Widowe Parker, late wife to
-Humfrey Parker, a blacksmith, deceassed, and worketh
-as her servant at 5<i>s.</i> a weeke, she being his aunt, and
-was advised to worke in noe other manner but as a
-journeyman.”<a id='r405' /><a href='#f405' class='c021'><sup>[405]</sup></a> The connection often ended in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_190'>190</span>marriage; it was brought to the notice of one of
-the Quaker’s Meetings in London that one of their
-Members, “Will Townsend ... card maker proposes
-to take to wife Elizabeth Doshell of ye same
-place to be his wife, and ye same Elizabeth doth
-propose to take ye said Will to be her husband, the
-yonge man liveing with her as a journey-man had
-thought and a beliefe that she would come to owne
-ye truth and did propose to her his Intentions
-towards her as to marige before she did come to
-owne the truth which thinge being minded to him
-by ffriends ... he has acknowledged it soe and
-sayes it had been beter that he had waited till he
-had had his hope in some measure answered.”<a id='r406' /><a href='#f406' class='c021'><sup>[406]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Such marriages, though obviously offering many
-advantages, were not always satisfactory. A lamentable
-picture of an unfortunate one is given in the
-petition of Sarah Westwood, wife of Robert Westwood,
-Feltmaker, presented to Laud in 1639, showing that
-“your petitioner was (formerly) the wife of one John
-Davys, alsoe a Feltmaker, who dying left her a howse
-furnished with goodes sufficient for her use therein
-and charged with one childe, as yet but an infant,
-and two apprentices, who, for the residue of their
-termes ... could well have atchieved sufficient
-for the maynetenance of themselves and alsoe of
-your petitioner and her child. That being thus left
-in good estate for livelyhood, her nowe husband
-became a suitor unto her in the way of marriage,
-being then a journeyman feltmaker....”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Soon after their marriage, “Westwood following
-lewde courses, often beate and abused your petitioner,
-sold and consumed what her former husband left her,
-threatened to kill her and her child, turned them
-out of dores, refusing to afford them any means of
-subsistance, but on the contrary seekes the utter
-ruin of them both and most scandelously has traduced
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_191'>191</span>your petitioner giving out in speeches that she would
-have poysoned him thereby to bring a generall
-disgrace upon her, ... and forbiddes all people
-where she resortes to afford her entertaignment, and
-will not suffer her to worke for the livelyhood of
-her and her child, but will have accompt of the
-same.... Albeit he can get by his labour
-20/- a weeke, yet he consumes the same in idle
-company ... having lewdlie spent all he had
-with your petitioner.”<a id='r407' /><a href='#f407' class='c021'><sup>[407]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Though their entrance to the Gilds and Companies
-was most often obtained by women through marriage,
-it has already been shown that their admission by
-apprenticeship was not unknown, and they also
-occasionally acquired freedom by patrimony; thus
-“Katherine Wetwood, daughter of Humphrey Wetwood,
-of London, Pewterer, was sworn and made free
-by the Testimony of the Master and Wardens of
-the Merchant Taylors’ Co., and of two Silk Weavers,
-that she was a virgin and twenty-one years of age.
-She paid the usual patrimony fine of 9<i>s.</i> 2<i>d.</i>”<a id='r408' /><a href='#f408' class='c021'><sup>[408]</sup></a> More
-than one hundred years later Mary Temple was made
-free of the Girdlers’ Company by patrimony.<a id='r409' /><a href='#f409' class='c021'><sup>[409]</sup></a> No
-jealousy is expressed of the women who were members of
-the Companies, but all others were rigorously excluded
-from employment. Complaints were brought before the
-Girdlers’ that certain Girdlers in London “set on
-worke such as had not served 7 years at the art,
-and also for setting forreigners and maids on worke.”<a id='r410' /><a href='#f410' class='c021'><sup>[410]</sup></a>
-Rules were made in Bristol in 1606, forbidding women
-to work at the trades of the whitawers (white leather-dressers),
-Point-makers and Glovers.<a id='r411' /><a href='#f411' class='c021'><sup>[411]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_192'>192</span>In the unprotected trades where the Gild organisation
-had broken down, and the profits of the small
-tradesmen had been reduced to a minimum by unlimited
-competition, the family depended upon the
-labour of mother and children as well as the father for
-its support. Petitions presented to the King concerning
-grievances under which they suffer, generally
-include wives and children in the number of those
-engaged in the trade in question. On a proposal
-to tax tobacco pipes, the makers show “that all
-the poorer sort of the Trade must be compelled to
-lay it down, for want of Stock or Credit to carry it
-on; and so their Wives and Children, who help to
-get their Bread, must of necessity perish, or become
-a Charge to their respective Parishes. That when
-a Gross of Pipes are made, they sell them for 1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>
-and 1<i>s.</i> 10<i>d.</i>, out of which 2<i>d.</i> or 3<i>d.</i> is their greatest
-Profit. And they not already having Stock, or can
-make Pipes fast enough to maintain their Families,
-how much less can they be capable, when half the
-Stock they have, must be paid down to pay the
-King his Duty?”<a id='r412' /><a href='#f412' class='c021'><sup>[412]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The Glovers prepared a memorandum showing
-the great grievances there would be if a Duty be laid
-on Sheep and Lamb Skins, Drest in Oyl etc. “The
-Glovers,” they say, “are many Thousands in Number,
-in the Counties of England, City of London and
-Liberties thereof, and generally so Poor (the said
-Trade being so bad and Gloves so plenty) that mear
-Necessity doth compel them to Sell their Goods daily
-to the Glove-sellers, and to take what Prises they will
-give them, to keep them and their Children and Families
-at Work to maintain them, or else they must
-perrish for want of Bred.”<a id='r413' /><a href='#f413' class='c021'><sup>[413]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_193'>193</span>The Pin-makers say that their company “consists
-for the most part of poor and indigent People, who
-have neither Credit nor Money to purchase Wyre of
-the Merchant at the best hand, but are forced for want
-thereof, to buy only small Parcels of the second or
-third Buyer, as they have occasion to use it, and to
-sell off the Pins they make of the same from Week
-to Week, as soon as they are made, for ready money,
-to feed themselves, their Wives, and Children, whom
-they are constrained to imploy to go up and down
-every Saturday Night from Shop to Shop to offer their
-Pins for Sale, otherwise cannot have mony to buy
-bread.”<a id='r414' /><a href='#f414' class='c021'><sup>[414]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>A similar picture is given in the “Mournfull Cryes
-of many thousand Poore tradesmen, who are ready
-to famish through decay of Trade.” “Oh that the
-cravings of our Stomacks could bee heard by the
-Parliament and City! Oh that the Teares of our poore
-famishing Babes were botled! Oh that their tender
-Mothers Cryes for bread to feed them were ingraven
-in brasse.... O you Members of
-Parliament and rich men in the City, that are at
-ease, and drink Wine in Bowles ... you that
-grind our faces and Flay off our skins ... is
-there none to Pity.... Its your Taxes
-Customes and Excize, that compels the Country to
-raise the price of Food and to buy nothing from
-us but meere absolute necessaries; and then you
-of the City that buy our Worke, must have your
-Tables furnished ... and therefore will
-give us little or nothing for our Worke, even what you
-please, because you know wee must sell for Monyes
-to set our Families on worke, or else wee famish
-... and since the late Lord Mayor Adams,
-you have put into execution an illegall, wicked
-Decree of the Common Counsell; whereby you have
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_194'>194</span>taken our goods from us, if we have gone to the Innes
-to sell them to the Countrimen; and you have murdered
-some of our poor wives, that have gone to Innes
-to find countrimen to buie them.”<a id='r415' /><a href='#f415' class='c021'><sup>[415]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>In each case it will be noticed that the wife’s
-activity is specially mentioned in connection with
-the sale of the goods. Women were so closely connected
-with industrial life in London that when the Queen
-proposed to leave London in 1641 it was the women
-who petitioned Parliament, declaring, “that your
-Petitioners, their Husbands, their Children and their
-Families, amounting to many thousand soules; have
-lived in plentifull and good fashion, by the exercise
-of severall Trades and venting of divers workes....
-All depending wholly for the sale of their commodities,
-(which is the maintenance and very existence and
-beeing of themselves, their husbands, and families)
-upon the splendour and glory of the English Court,
-and principally upon that of the Queenes Majesty.”<a id='r416' /><a href='#f416' class='c021'><sup>[416]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>In addition to these Trades, skilled and semi-skilled,
-in which men and women worked together,
-certain skilled women’s trades existed in London which
-were sufficiently profitable for considerable premiums
-to be paid with the girls who were apprenticed to
-them.<a id='r417' /><a href='#f417' class='c021'><sup>[417]</sup></a> These girls probably continued to exercise
-their own trade after marriage, their skill serving them
-instead of dowry, the Customs of London providing
-that “married women who practise certain crafts
-in the city alone and without their husbands, may
-take girls as apprentices to serve them and learn their
-trade, and these apprentices shall be bound by their
-indentures of apprenticeship to both husband and
-wife, to learn the wife’s trade as is aforesaid, and such
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_195'>195</span>indentures shall be enrolled as well for women as
-for men.”<a id='r418' /><a href='#f418' class='c021'><sup>[418]</sup></a> The girls who were apprenticed to
-Carpenters were evidently on this footing.</p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>References in contemporary documents to women
-who were following skilled or semi-skilled trades
-in London are very frequent. Thus Thomas
-Swan is reported to have committed thefts “on his
-mistress Alice Fox, Wax-chandler of Old Bailey.”<a id='r419' /><a href='#f419' class='c021'><sup>[419]</sup></a>
-Mrs. Cellier speaks of “one Mrs. Phillips, an upholsterer,”<a id='r420' /><a href='#f420' class='c021'><sup>[420]</sup></a>
-while the Rev. Giles Moore notes in his
-diary “payed Mistress Cooke, in Shoe Lane, for a new
-trusse, and for mending the old one and altering the
-plate thereof, £1 5 0; should shee dye, I am in future
-to inquire for her daughter Barbara, who may do the
-like for mee.”<a id='r421' /><a href='#f421' class='c021'><sup>[421]</sup></a> Isaac Derston was “put an app.
-to Anthony Watts for the term of seven years, but
-turned over to the widow—dwelling near: palls: who
-bottoms cane chaires, £2 10 0.”<a id='r422' /><a href='#f422' class='c021'><sup>[422]</sup></a> That the bottoming
-of cane chairs was a poor trade is witnessed by the
-meagreness of the premium paid in this case.</p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>No traces can be found of any organisation existing
-in the skilled women’s trades, such as upholstery,
-millinery, mantua-making, but a Gild existed
-among the women who sorted and packed wool
-at Southampton. A Sisterhood consisting of twelve
-women of good and honest demeanour was formed
-there as a company to serve the merchants in the
-occupation of covering pokes or baloes [bales]. Two
-of the sisters acted as wardens. In 1554 a court was
-held to adjudicate on the irregular attendance of
-some of the sisters. The names of two wardens
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_196'>196</span>and eleven sisters are given; no one who was absent
-from her duties for more than three months was permitted
-to return to the Sisterhood without the
-Mayor’s licence. “Item, yᵗ is ordered by the sayde
-Maior and his bretherne that all suche as shall be
-nomynated and appoynted to be of the systeryd
-shall make a brekefaste at their entrye for a knowlege
-and shal bestowe at the least xxᵈ or ijˢ, or more as
-they lyste.”<a id='r423' /><a href='#f423' class='c021'><sup>[423]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Possibly when more records of the Gilds and Companies
-have been published in a complete form, some
-of the gaps which are left in this account of the position
-of women in the skilled and semi-skilled trades may
-be filled in; but the extent to which married women
-were engaged in them must always remain largely
-a matter of conjecture, and unfortunately it is precisely
-this point which is most interesting to the sociologist.
-Practically all adult women were married, and
-the character of the productive work which an
-economic organisation allots to married women and
-the conditions of their labour decide very largely
-the position of the mother in society, and therefore,
-ultimately, the fate of her children. The fragmentary
-evidence which has been examined shows that, while
-the system of family industry lasted, it was so usual
-in the skilled and semi-skilled trades for women to
-share in the business life of their husbands that they
-were regarded as partners. Though the wife had
-rarely, if ever, served an apprenticeship to his trade,
-there were many branches in which her assistance
-was of great value, and husband and wife naturally
-divided the industry between them in the way which
-was most advantageous to the family, while unmarried
-servants, either men or women, performed the domestic
-drudgery. As capitalistic organisation developed,
-many avenues of industry were, however, gradually
-closed to married women. The masters no longer
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_197'>197</span>depended upon the assistance of their wives, while
-the journeyman’s position became very similar to
-that of the modern artisan; he was employed on the
-premises of his master, and thus, though his association
-with his fellows gave him opportunity for combination,
-his wife and daughters, who remained at home, did
-not share in the improvements which he effected in
-his own economic position. The alternatives before
-the women of this class were either to withdraw
-altogether from productive activity, and so become
-entirely dependent upon their husband’s goodwill,
-or else to enter the labour market independently and
-fight their battles alone, in competition not only with
-other women, but with men.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Probably the latter alternative was still most often
-followed by married women, although at this time the
-idea that men “keep” their wives begins to prevail:
-but the force of the old tradition maintained amongst
-women a desire for the feeling of independence which
-can only be gained through productive activity, and
-thus married women, even when unable to work with
-their husbands, generally occupied themselves with
-some industry, however badly it might be paid.</p>
-<h3 class='c032'>B. <i>Retail Trades.</i></h3>
-
-<p class='c029'>The want of technical skill and knowledge which so
-often hampered the position of women in the Skilled
-Trades, was a smaller handicap in Retail Trades,
-where manual dexterity and technical knowledge
-are less important than general intelligence and a
-lively understanding of human nature. Quick perception
-and social tact, which are generally supposed
-to be feminine characteristics, often proved useful
-even to the craftsman, when his wife assumed the
-charge of the financial side of his business; it is
-therefore not surprising to find women taking a
-prominent part in every branch of Retail Trade.
-In fact the woman who was left without other
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_198'>198</span>resources turned naturally to keeping a shop, or to the
-sale of goods in the street, as the most likely means
-for maintaining her children, and thus the woman
-shopkeeper is no infrequent figure in contemporary
-writings. For example, in one of the many pamphlets
-describing the incidents of the Civil War, we read that
-“Mistresse Phillips was sent for, who was found
-playing the good housewife at home (a thing much
-out of fashion) ... and committed close
-prisoner to castle.” Her husband having been driven
-before from town, “She was to care for ten children,
-the most of them being small, one whereof she at
-the same time suckled, her shop (which enabled her
-to keep all those) was ransacked,” £14 was taken, and
-the house plundered, horse and men billetted with her
-when she could scarce get bread enough for herself
-and her family without charity. She was tried, and
-condemned to death, when, the account continues,
-“Mistress Phillips not knowing but her turne was
-next, standing all the while with a halter about her
-neck over against the Gallowes, a Souldier would have
-put the halter under her Handkerchiefe, but she would
-not suffer him, speaking with a very audible voice,
-‘I am not ashamed to suffer reproach and shame in
-this cause,’ a brave resolution, beseeming a nobler sex,
-and not unfit to be registered in the Book of Martyrs.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The woman shop-keeper is found also among the
-stock characters of the drama. In “The Old Batchelor”
-Belinda relates that “a Country Squire, with
-the Equipage of a Wife and two Daughters, came to
-Mrs. Snipwel’s Shop while I was there ... the
-Father bought a Powder-Horn, and an Almanack,
-and a Comb-Case; the Mother, a great Fruz-Towr, and
-a fat Amber-Necklace; the Daughters only tore two
-Pair of Kid-leather Gloves, with trying ’em on.”<a id='r424' /><a href='#f424' class='c021'><sup>[424]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Amongst the Quakers, shop-keeping was a usual
-employment for women. Thomas Chalkley, soon
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_199'>199</span>after his marriage “had a Concern to visit Friends
-in the counties of Surrey, Sussex and Kent, which
-I performed in about two Weeks Time, and came
-home and followed my calling, and was industrious
-therein; and when I had gotten something to bear
-my expenses, and settled my Wife in some little
-Business I found an Exercise on my Spirit to go over
-to <i>Ireland</i>.”<a id='r425' /><a href='#f425' class='c021'><sup>[425]</sup></a> Another Quaker describes how he
-applied himself “to assist my Wife in her Business
-as well as I could, attending General, Monthly
-and other Meetings on public Occasions for
-three Years.”<a id='r426' /><a href='#f426' class='c021'><sup>[426]</sup></a> The provision of the little stock
-needed for a shop was a favourite method of assisting
-widows.</p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The frequency with which payments to women are
-entered in account books<a id='r427' /><a href='#f427' class='c021'><sup>[427]</sup></a> is further evidence of the
-extent to which they were engaged in Retail Trades, but
-this occupation was not freely open to all and any who
-needed it. It was, on the contrary, hedged about with
-almost as many restrictions as the gild trades. The
-craftsman was generally free to dispose of his own
-goods, but many restrictions hampered the Retailer,
-that is to say the person who bought to sell again.
-The community regarded this class with some
-jealousy, and limited their numbers. Hence, the poor
-woman who sought to improve her position by opening
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_200'>200</span>a little shop, did not always find her course clear.
-In fact there were many towns in which the
-barriers between her and an honest independence
-were insurmountable. Girls were, however,
-apprenticed to shopkeepers oftener than to the gild
-trades, and licences to sell were granted to freewomen
-as well as to freemen. At Dorchester, girls who had
-served an apprenticeship to shopkeepers were duly admitted
-to the freedom of the Borough; we find entered
-in the Minute Book the names of Celina Hilson,
-apprenticed to Mat. Hilson, Governor, haberdasher,
-and Mary Goodredge, spinster, haberdasher of small
-wares; also of James Bun (who had married Elizabeth
-Williams a freewoman), haberdasher of small
-wares; Elizabeth Williams, apprenticed seven years to
-her Mother, Mary W., tallow chaundler, and of
-William Weare, apprenticed to Grace Lacy, widow,
-woolen draper.<a id='r428' /><a href='#f428' class='c021'><sup>[428]</sup></a> An order was granted by the
-Middlesex Quarter Sessions to discharge Mary Jemmett
-from apprenticeship to Jane Tyllard, widow, from
-whom she was to learn “the trade of keeping a linen
-shop,”<a id='r429' /><a href='#f429' class='c021'><sup>[429]</sup></a> and an account is given of a difference between
-Susanna Shippey, of Mile End, Stepney, widow, and
-Ann Taylor, her apprentice, touching the discharge
-of the said apprentice. It appears that Ann has
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_201'>201</span>often defrauded her mistress of her goods and sold
-them for less than cost price.<a id='r430' /><a href='#f430' class='c021'><sup>[430]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Little mercy was shown to either man or woman
-who engaged in the Retail Trade without having served
-an apprenticeship. A warrant was only issued to
-release “Elizabeth Beaseley from the Hospital of
-Bridewell on her brother John Beaseley’s having entered
-into bond that she shall leave off selling tobacco
-in the town of Wigan.”<a id='r431' /><a href='#f431' class='c021'><sup>[431]</sup></a> Mary Keeling was presented
-at Nottingham “for falowing ye Treaid of a Grocer
-and Mercer and kepping open shope for on month
-last past, <i>contra Statum</i>, not being <i>aprentice</i>.”<a id='r432' /><a href='#f432' class='c021'><sup>[432]</sup></a> At
-Carlisle it was ordered that “Isaack Tully shall
-submit himself to pay a fine to this trade if they
-shall think it fitting for taking his sister to keep &amp;
-sell waires for him contrary to our order,”<a id='r433' /><a href='#f433' class='c021'><sup>[433]</sup></a> and when
-it was reported that “Mrs. Studholme hath employed
-James Moorehead Scotsman to vend and sell goods
-in her shop contrary to an order of this company
-wee doe order that the wardens of our company shall
-fourthwith acquaint Mrs. Studholme yt. she must
-not be admitted to entertain him any longʳ in her
-employmt but that before our next quarter day she
-take some other course for keeping her shop and yt.
-he be noe longer employed therein till yt. time.”<a id='r434' /><a href='#f434' class='c021'><sup>[434]</sup></a>
-At a later date Mrs. Sybil Hetherington, Mrs. Mary
-Nixon, Mrs. Jane Jackson, widow, and four men,
-were dealt with for having shops or retailery of goods
-contrary to the statute.<a id='r435' /><a href='#f435' class='c021'><sup>[435]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_202'>202</span>There were fewer restrictions on retailing in London
-than in the provinces, and trading was virtually free
-in the streets of London. An act of the Common
-Council, passed in 1631, deals with abuses rising from
-this freedom, declaring “that of late it is come to
-passe that divers unruly people, as Butchers, Bakers,
-Poulters, Chandlers, Fruiterers, Sempsters, sellers
-of Grocery wares, Oyster wives, Herbe wives, Tripe
-wives, and the like; who not contented to enjoy the
-benefit and common right of Citizens, by holding
-their market and continual Trades in their several
-Shops &amp; houses where they dwell, doe ... by
-themselves, wives, children and seruants enter into,
-and take up their standings in the said streets and
-places appointed for the common Markets, unto
-which the country people only have in former times
-used to resort to vend and utter their victuall and
-other commodities; in which Markets the said Freemen
-doe abide for the most part of the day and that
-not only upon Market dayes, but all the weeke long
-with multitudes of Baskets, Tubs, Chaires, Boards
-&amp; Stooles, ... the common Market places
-by these disordered people be so taken up, that country
-people when they come with victual and provision
-have no roome left them to set down their ...
-baskets.”<a id='r436' /><a href='#f436' class='c021'><sup>[436]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>In provincial towns, stalls in the market place
-were leased to tradesmen by the Corporation, the
-rents forming a valuable revenue for the town; infringements
-of the monopoly were summarily dealt
-with and often the privilege was reserved for “free”
-men and women. Thus at St. Albans Richard
-Morton’s wife was presented because she “doth
-ordinarilie sell shirt bands and cuffes, hankerchers,
-coifes, and other small lynenn wares openlie in the
-markett,”<a id='r437' /><a href='#f437' class='c021'><sup>[437]</sup></a> not being free. It was as a special favour
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_203'>203</span>that leave was given to a poor woman to sell shoes
-in Carlisle market. The conditions are explained
-as follows:—“Whereas Ann Barrow the wife of
-Richard Barrow formerly one that by virtue of the
-Coldstream Act brought shoes and exposed them to
-sell in Carlisle market he being long abroad and his
-said wife poor the trade is willing to permit the said
-Ann to bring and sell shoes provided always they be
-the work of one former servant and noe more and for
-this permission she owns the trades favour and is
-thankful for it ... agreed and ordered that
-every yeare she shall pay 2<i>s.</i>”<a id='r438' /><a href='#f438' class='c021'><sup>[438]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The Corporation at Reading was occupied for a
-whole year with the case of the “Aperne woman.”
-The first entry in the records states that “Steven
-Foorde of Newbery the aperne woman’s husband,
-exhibited a lettre from the Lord of Wallingford for
-his sellerman to shewe and sell aperninge<a id='r439' /><a href='#f439' class='c021'><sup>[439]</sup></a> in towne,
-in Mr. Mayor’s handes, etc. And thereupon tollerated
-to doe as formerly she had done, payeing yerely 10<i>s.</i>
-to the Hall.”<a id='r440' /><a href='#f440' class='c021'><sup>[440]</sup></a> Next year there is another entry to
-the effect that “it was agreed that Steven Foorde’s
-wief shall contynue sellinge of aperninge, as heretofore,
-and that the other woman usinge to sell suche stuffes
-at William Bagley’s dore shalbe forbidden, and shall
-not hencefourth be permitted to sell in the boroughe
-etc., and William Bagley shall be warned.”<a id='r441' /><a href='#f441' class='c021'><sup>[441]</sup></a> The other
-woman proving recalcitrant, “at Steven Foorde’s
-wive’s request and complaynte it was grannted that
-William Bagley’s stranger, selling aperninge in contempt
-of the government, shalbe questioned.”<a id='r442' /><a href='#f442' class='c021'><sup>[442]</sup></a> Finally
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_204'>204</span>it was “agreed that Steven Foorde’s wife shall henceforth
-keepe Markett and sell onely linsey woolsey
-of their own making in this markett, according to
-the Lord Wallingforde’s lettre, she payeing xs. per
-annum, and that noe other stranger shall henceforth
-keepe markett or sell lynsey and woolsey in this
-markett.”<a id='r443' /><a href='#f443' class='c021'><sup>[443]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>At this time, when most roads were mere bridle
-tracks, and few conveniences for travel existed, when
-even in towns the streets were so ill-paved that in
-bad weather the goodwife hesitated before going to
-the market, the dwellers in villages and hamlets were
-often fain to buy from pedlars who brought goods
-to their door and to sell butter and eggs to anyone who
-would undertake the trouble of collection. Their
-need was recognised by the authorities, who granted
-a certain number of licences to Badgers, Pedlars and
-Regraters, and probably many others succeeded in
-trading unlicensed. This class of Dealers was
-naturally regarded with suspicion by shopkeepers. A
-pamphlet demanding their suppression, points out that
-“the poor decaying Shopkeeper has a large Rent to
-pay, and Family to Support; he maintains not
-his own Children only, but all the poor Orphans and
-Widows in his Parish; nay, sometimes the Widows
-and Orphans of the very Pedlar or Hawker, who has
-thus fatally laboured to starve him.” As for the
-Hawkers, “we know they pretend they are shut out
-of the great Trading Cities, Towns and Corporations
-by the respective Charters and all other settled Privileges
-of those Places, but we answer that tho’ for
-want of legal Introduction they may not be able to set
-up in Cities, Corporations, etc., yet there are very many
-Places of very great Trade, where no Corporation
-Privileges would obstruct them ... if any
-of them should be reduc’d and ... be brought
-to the Parish to keep; that is to say, their Wives and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_205'>205</span>Children, the Manufacturers, the Shopkeepers who confessedly
-make up the principal Numbers of those corporations,
-and are the chief Supporters of the Parishes,
-will be much more willing to maintain them, than
-to be ruin’d by them.”<a id='r444' /><a href='#f444' class='c021'><sup>[444]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The terms Badging, Peddling, Hawking and Regrating
-are not very clearly defined, and were used in
-senses which somewhat overlap each other; but the
-Badger seems to have been a person who “dealt”
-in a wholesale way. A licence was granted in 1630
-to “Edith Doddington of Hilbishopps, widdowe,
-to be a badger of butter and cheese and to carry the
-same into the Counties of Wiltes, Hamsher, Dorsᵗᵗ
-and Devon, and to retourne againe with corne and
-to sell it againe in any faire or markett within this
-County during one whole yeare now next ensueing;
-and she is not to travell with above three horses,
-mares or geldings at the most part.”<a id='r445' /><a href='#f445' class='c021'><sup>[445]</sup></a> The authorities,
-fearing lest corners and profiteering should
-result from interference with the supply of necessaries,
-made “ingrossing” or anything resembling an
-attempt to buy up the supply of wheat, salt, etc., an
-offence. Amongst the prosecutions which were made
-on this account are presentments of “John Whaydon
-and John Preist of Watchett, partners, for ingross
-of salt, Julia Stone, Richard Miles, Joane Miles als.
-Stone of Bridgwater for ingross of salte.”<a id='r446' /><a href='#f446' class='c021'><sup>[446]</sup></a> of “Johann
-Stedie of Fifehead, widdow, ... for ingrossinge
-of corne contrary etc,”<a id='r447' /><a href='#f447' class='c021'><sup>[447]</sup></a> of “Edith Bruer
-and Katherine Bruer, Spinsters, of Halse ... for ingrossinge
-of corne,”<a id='r448' /><a href='#f448' class='c021'><sup>[448]</sup></a> and of “Johann Thorne
-... widow ... for ingrossinge of
-wheate, Barley, Butter and Cheese.”<a id='r449' /><a href='#f449' class='c021'><sup>[449]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_206'>206</span>Pedlars and hawkers carried on an extensive trade
-all over the country. At first sight this would seem
-a business ill suited to women, for it involved carrying
-a heavy pack of goods on the back over long distances;
-and yet it appears as though in some districts the
-trade was almost their monopoly. The success that
-attended Joan Dant’s efforts as a pedlar has been told
-elsewhere.<a id='r450' /><a href='#f450' class='c021'><sup>[450]</sup></a> How complete was the ascendency which
-women had established in certain districts over this
-class of trade is shown by the following definition
-of the term “Hawkers”:—“those that profer their
-Wares by Wholesale which are called Hawkers, and
-which are not only the Manufacturers themselves,
-but others besides them, viz. the Women in <i>London</i>,
-in <i>Exceter</i> and in <i>Manchester</i>, who do not only Profer
-Commodities at the Shops and Ware houses, but
-also at Inns to Countrey-Chapmen. Likewise the
-<i>Manchester</i>-men, the <i>Sherborn</i>-men, and many others,
-that do Travel from one Market-Town to another;
-and there at some Inn do profer their Wares to sell
-to the Shopkeepers of the place.”<a id='r451' /><a href='#f451' class='c021'><sup>[451]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Though peddling might in some cases be developed
-into a large and profitable concern, more often it
-afforded a bare subsistence. The character of a
-woman engaged in it is given in a certificate brought
-before the Hertford Quarter Sessions in 1683 by the
-inhabitants of Epping, which states that “Sarah,
-wife of Richard Young, of Epping, cooper, who was
-accused of pocket-picking when she was about her
-lawfull and honest imploy of buying small wares and
-wallnuts” at Sabridgworth fair, is “a very honest
-and well-behaved woman, not given to pilfer or
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_207'>207</span>steale,” and that they believe her to be falsely
-accused.<a id='r452' /><a href='#f452' class='c021'><sup>[452]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>While the Pedlar dealt chiefly in small wares and
-haberdashery, Regraters were concerned with the
-more perishable articles of food. In this they were
-seriously hampered by bye-laws forbidding the
-buying and selling of such articles in one day. The
-laws had been framed with the object of preventing
-a few persons buying up all the supplies in the market
-and selling them at exorbitant prices, but their application
-seems to have been chiefly directed in the
-interests of the shopkeepers, to whom the competition
-of women who hawked provisions from door to
-door was a serious matter, the women being contented
-with very small profits, and the housewives
-finding it so convenient to have goods brought to
-their very doorstep. The injustice of the persecution
-of these poor women is protested against by the
-writer of a pamphlet, who points out that “We
-provide Men shall not be cheated in buying a pennyworth
-of Eggs, but make no provision to secure them
-from the same Abuse in a hundred pounds laid out
-in Cloaths. The poor Artizan shall not be oppressed
-in laying out his penny to one poorer than himself,
-but is without Remedy, shortened by a Company
-in his Penny as it comes in. I have heard Complaints
-of this Nature in greater matters of the publik Sales
-of the <i>East India Company</i>, perhaps if due consideration
-were had of these great Ingrossers, there
-would be found more Reason to restrain them, than
-a poor Woman that travels in the Country to buy up
-and sell in a Market a few Hens and Chickens.”<a id='r453' /><a href='#f453' class='c021'><sup>[453]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Even in the Middle Ages the trade of Regrating was
-almost regarded as the prerogative of women. Gower
-wrote “But to say the truth in this instance, the trade
-of regratery belongeth by right rather to women.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_208'>208</span>But if a woman be at it she in stinginess useth much
-more machination and deceit than a man; for she
-never alloweth the profit on a single crumb to escape
-her, nor faileth to hold her neighbour to paying his
-price; all who beseech her do but lose their time, for
-nothing doth she by courtesy, as anyone who drinketh
-in her house knoweth well.”<a id='r454' /><a href='#f454' class='c021'><sup>[454]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>In later times the feminine form of the word is
-used in the ordinances of the City of London, clearly
-showing that the persons who were then carrying on
-the trade were women; thus it was said “Let no
-Regrateress pass <i>London Bridge</i> towards <i>Suthwerk</i>,
-nor elsewhere, to buy Bread, to carry it into the
-City of <i>London</i> to sell; because the Bakers of <i>Suthwerk</i>,
-nor of any other Place, are not subject to the Justice
-of the City.” And again “Whereas it is common for
-merchants to give Credit, and especially for Bakers
-commonly to do the same with Regrateresses ...
-we forbid, that no Baker make the benefit
-of any Credit to a Regrateress, as long as he shall
-know her to be involved in her Neighbour’s Debt.”<a id='r455' /><a href='#f455' class='c021'><sup>[455]</sup></a>
-Moreover a very large proportion of the prosecutions
-for this offence were against women. “We Amerce
-Thomas Bardsley for his wife buyinge Butter Contrary
-to the orders of the towne in xiji<i>d.</i>”<a id='r456' /><a href='#f456' class='c021'><sup>[456]</sup></a> “Katherine
-Birch for buyinge and selling pullen [chicken] both of
-one day 3<i>s.</i> Thos. Ravald wife of Assheton of Mercy
-bancke for sellinge butter short of waight.”<a id='r457' /><a href='#f457' class='c021'><sup>[457]</sup></a> “Thomas
-Massey wife for buyinge a load of pease and sellinge
-them the same day. Amerced in 1<i>s.</i>”<a id='r458' /><a href='#f458' class='c021'><sup>[458]</sup></a> “Katharine
-Hall for buyinge and sellinge Cheese both of one day
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_209'>209</span>6<i>d.</i> Anne Rishton for buyinge and sellinge butter
-the same day Amercd in 3. 0.”<a id='r459' /><a href='#f459' class='c021'><sup>[459]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>As the Regrater dealt chiefly in food, her business
-is closely connected with the provision trades, but
-enough has been said here to indicate that of all
-retailing this was the form which most appealed to
-poor women, who were excluded from skilled trades
-and whose only other resource was spinning. The
-number of women in this unfortunate position was
-large, including as it did not only widows, whose
-families depended entirely upon their exertions,
-but also the wives of most of the men who were in
-receipt of day wages and had no garden or grazing
-rights. It has already been shown that wages, except
-perhaps in some skilled trades, were insufficient for
-the maintenance of a family. Therefore, when the
-mother of a young family could neither work in her
-husband’s trade nor provide her children with food
-by cultivating her garden or tending cows and poultry,
-she must find some other means to earn a little money.
-By wages she could seldom earn more than a penny or
-twopence a day and her food. Selling perishable
-articles of food from door to door presented greater
-chances of profit, and to this expedient poor women
-most often turned. In proportion as the trade was
-a convenience to the busy housewife, it became an
-unwelcome form of competition to the established
-shopkeepers, who, being influential in the Boroughs,
-could persecute and suppress the helpless, disorganised
-women who undersold them.</p>
-<h3 class='c032'>C. <i>Provision Trades.</i></h3>
-
-<p class='c029'>Under this head are grouped the Bakers, Millers,
-Butchers and Fishwives, together with the Brewers,
-Inn-keepers and Vintners, the category embracing both
-those who produced and those who retailed the
-provisions in question.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_210'>210</span>A large proportion both of the bread and
-beer consumed at this time was produced by
-women in domestic industry. The wages assessments
-show that on the larger farms the chief woman
-servant was expected both to brew and to bake, but
-the cottage folk in many cases cannot have possessed
-the necessary capital for brewing, and perhaps
-were wanting ovens in which to bake. Certainly in
-the towns both brewing and baking existed as trades
-from the earliest times. Though in many countries
-the grinding of corn has been one of the domestic
-occupations performed by women and slaves, in England
-women were saved this drudgery, for the toll of corn
-ground at the mill was an important item in the
-feudal lord’s revenue, and severe punishments were
-inflicted on those who ground corn elsewhere. The
-common bakehouse was also a monopoly of the
-feudal lord’s,<a id='r460' /><a href='#f460' class='c021'><sup>[460]</sup></a> but his rights in this case were not
-carried so far as to penalize baking for domestic
-purposes.</p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>It might be supposed that industries such as brewing
-and baking, which were so closely connected with the
-domestic arts pertaining to women, would be more
-extensively occupied by women than trades such as
-those of blacksmith or pewterer or butcher; but it
-will be shown that skill acquired domestically was
-not sufficient to establish a woman’s position in
-the world of trade, and that actually in the seventeenth
-century it was as difficult for her to become a baker
-as a butcher.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'><i>Baking.</i>—After the decay of feudal privileges the
-trade of baking was controlled on lines similar to
-those governing other trades, but subject to an even
-closer supervision by the local authorities, owing to the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_211'>211</span>fact that bread is a prime necessity of life. On this
-account its price was fixed by “the assize of bread.”
-The position of women in regard to the trade was
-also somewhat different, because while in other
-trades they possessed fewer facilities than men for
-acquiring technical experience, in this they learnt
-the art of baking as part of their domestic duties.
-Nevertheless, in the returns which give the names of
-authorised bakers, those of women do not greatly
-exceed in number the names which are given for
-other trades; of lists for the City of Chester, one
-gives thirty names of bakers, six being women, all
-widows, while another gives thirty-nine men and no
-women,<a id='r461' /><a href='#f461' class='c021'><sup>[461]</sup></a> and a third twenty-six men and three women.
-The assistance which the Baker’s wife gave to her
-husband, however, was taken for granted. At Carlisle,
-the bye-laws provide that “noe Persons ...
-shall brew or bayk to sell but only freemen and thare
-wifes.”<a id='r462' /><a href='#f462' class='c021'><sup>[462]</sup></a> And a rule at Beverley laid down that “no
-common baker or other baker called boule baker,
-their wives, servants, or apprentices, shall enter the
-cornmarket any Saturday for the future before 1 p.m.
-to buy any grain, nor buy wheat coming on Saturdays
-to market beyond 2 bushels for stock for their own
-house after the hour aforesaid.”<a id='r463' /><a href='#f463' class='c021'><sup>[463]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>A writer, who was appealing for an increase in the
-assize of bread, includes the wife’s work among the
-necessary costs of making a loaf; “Two shillings was
-allowed by the assize for all maner of charges in baking
-a quarter of wheate over and above the second price
-of wheate in the market,” but the writer declares
-that in Henry VII.’s time “the bakers ...
-might farre better cheape and with lesse charge of
-seruantes haue baked a quarter of Wheate, then now
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_212'>212</span>they can.” It was then allowed for “everie quarter
-of wheate baking, for furnace and wood vid. the Miller
-foure pence, for two journymen and two pages five-pence,
-for salt, yest, candle &amp; sandbandes two pence,
-for himselfe, his house, his wife, his dog &amp; his catte
-seven pence, and the branne to his advantage.”<a id='r464' /><a href='#f464' class='c021'><sup>[464]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The baker’s wife figures also in account books, as
-transacting business for her husband. Thus the
-Carpenters’ Company “Resd of Lewes davys wyffe
-the baker a fyne for a license for John Pasmore the
-forren to sette upe a lytyll shed on his backsyde.”<a id='r465' /><a href='#f465' class='c021'><sup>[465]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Although conforming in general to the regulations
-for other trades, certain Boroughs retained the rights
-over baking which had been enjoyed by the Feudal
-Lord, the Portmote at Salford ordering that “Samell
-Mort shall surcease from beakinge sale bread by the
-first of May next upon the forfeit of 5ls except hee
-beake at the Comon beakehouse in Salford.”<a id='r466' /><a href='#f466' class='c021'><sup>[466]</sup></a> In
-other towns the bakers were sufficiently powerful
-to enforce their own terms on the Borough. In York,
-for instance, the Corporation of Bakers, which became
-very rich, succeeded in excluding the country, or
-“boule bakers,” from the market, undertaking to
-sell bread at the same rates; but the monopoly once
-secured they declared it was impossible to produce
-bread at this price, and the magistrates allowed an
-advance.<a id='r467' /><a href='#f467' class='c021'><sup>[467]</sup></a> In some cases bakers were required to
-take out licences, these being granted only to freemen
-and freewomen; in others they were formed into
-Companies, with rules of apprenticeship. “They
-shall receive no man into their saide company of
-bakeres, nor woman unles her husband have bene
-a free burges, and compound with Mr. Maior and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_213'>213</span>the warden of the company.”<a id='r468' /><a href='#f468' class='c021'><sup>[468]</sup></a> At Reading in 1624,
-“the bakers, vizt., William Hill, Abram Paise, Alexander
-Pether, complayne against bakers not freemen,
-vizt., Izaak Wracke useth the trade his wief did use
-when he marryed. Michaell Ebson saith he was
-an apprentice in towne and having noe worke doth a
-little to gett bread. James Arnold will surceasse ... Wydowe
-Bradbury alwayes hath used
-to bake.”<a id='r469' /><a href='#f469' class='c021'><sup>[469]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>That women were members of the Bakers’ Companies
-is shown by rules which refer to sisters as well as
-brothers. In 1622 the Corporation at Salisbury
-ordained that “no free brother or free sister shall at
-any time hereafter make, utter, or sell bread, made
-with butter, or milk, spice cakes, etc ... except
-it be before spoken for funerals, or upon the
-Friday before Easter, or at Christmas.... No
-free brother or free sister shall sell any bread in the
-market. No free brother or free sister shall hereafter
-lend any money to an innholder or victualler, to the
-intent or purpose of getting his or their custom.”<a id='r470' /><a href='#f470' class='c021'><sup>[470]</sup></a>
-It is not likely that many women served an apprenticeship,
-but the frequency with which they are
-charged with offences against the Bye-Laws is some
-clue to the numbers engaged in the trade. For
-instance, in Manchester, Martha Wrigley and nine
-men were presented in 1648 “for makeinge bread
-above &amp; vnder the size &amp; spice bread.”<a id='r471' /><a href='#f471' class='c021'><sup>[471]</sup></a> In 1650,
-twenty-five men and no women were charged with
-a similar offence,<a id='r472' /><a href='#f472' class='c021'><sup>[472]</sup></a> in 1651 eleven men and no women<a id='r473' /><a href='#f473' class='c021'><sup>[473]</sup></a>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_214'>214</span>and in 1652 are entered the names of five men and
-ten women<a id='r474' /><a href='#f474' class='c021'><sup>[474]</sup></a>.</p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The constant complaints brought against people
-who were using the trade “unlawfully” show how
-difficult it was to enforce rules of apprenticeship in
-a trade which was so habitually used by women for
-domestic purposes. Information was brought that
-“divers of the inhabᵗˢ of Thirsk do use the trade of
-baking, not having been apprentices thereof, but
-their wives being brought up and exercised therein
-many yeares have therefore used it ... and
-the matter referred to the Justices in Qʳ Sessions
-to limitt a certain number to use that trade without
-future trouble of any informers and that such as
-are allowed by the said Justices, to have a tolleration
-to take apprentices ... the eight persons,
-viz., Jaˢ. Pibus, Anth. Gamble, John Harrison, Widow
-Watson, Jane Skales, Jane Rutter, Tho. Carter and
-John Bell, shall onlie use and occupie the said trade
-of baking, and the rest to be restrayned.”<a id='r475' /><a href='#f475' class='c021'><sup>[475]</sup></a> The
-insistence upon apprenticeship must have been
-singularly exasperating to women who had learnt to
-bake excellent bread from their mothers, or mistresses,
-and it was natural for them to evade, when possible,
-a rule which seemed so arbitrary; but they could not
-do so with impunity. Thus the Hertfordshire
-Quarter Session was informed “One Andrew Tomson’s
-wife doth bake, and William Everite’s wife
-doth bake bread to sell being not apprenticed nor
-licensed.”<a id='r476' /><a href='#f476' class='c021'><sup>[476]</sup></a> How heavily prosecutions of this character
-weighed upon the poor, is shown by a certificate
-brought to the same Quarter Sessions nearly a hundred
-years later, stating that “William Pepper, of Sabridgworth,
-is of honest and industrious behaviour, but
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_215'>215</span>in a poor and low condition, and so not able to support
-the charge of defending an indictment against him
-for baking for hire (he having once taken a halfpenny
-for baking a neighbour’s loaf) and has a great charge
-of children whom he has hitherto brought up to
-hard work and industrious labour, who otherwise
-might have been a charge to the parish, and will
-be forced to crave the relief of the parish, to defray
-the charge that may ensue upon this trouble given him
-by a presentment.”<a id='r477' /><a href='#f477' class='c021'><sup>[477]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The line taken by the authorities was evidently
-intended to keep the trade of baking in a few
-hands. The object may have been partly to facilitate
-inspection and thereby check short measure and
-adulteration; whatever the motive the effect must
-certainly have tended to discourage women from
-developing the domestic art of baking into a trade.
-Consequently in this, as in other trades, the woman’s
-contribution to the industry generally took the form
-of a wife helping her husband, or a widow carrying
-on her late husband’s business.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'><i>Millers</i>:—It was probably only as the wife
-or widow of a miller that women took part in the
-business of milling. An entry in the Carlisle Records
-states “we amercye Archilles Armstronge for keeping
-his wief to play the Milner, contrary the orders of
-this cyttie.”<a id='r478' /><a href='#f478' class='c021'><sup>[478]</sup></a> But it is not unusual to come across
-references to corn mills which were in the hands of
-women; a place in Yorkshire is described as being
-“near to Mistress Lovell’s Milne.”<a id='r479' /><a href='#f479' class='c021'><sup>[479]</sup></a> “Margaret Page,
-of Hertingfordbury, widow,” was indicted for “erecting
-a mill house in the common way there,”<a id='r480' /><a href='#f480' class='c021'><sup>[480]</sup></a> and
-at Stockton “One water corne milne ...
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_216'>216</span>is lett by lease unto Alice Armstrong for 3 lives.”<a id='r481' /><a href='#f481' class='c021'><sup>[481]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Such instances are merely a further proof of the
-activity shown by married women in the family
-business whenever this was carried on within their
-reach.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'><i>Butchers</i>:—The position which women took in the
-Butchers’ trade resembled very closely their position
-as bakers, for, as has been shown, the special advantages
-which women, by virtue of their domestic training,
-might have enjoyed when trading as bakers, were
-cancelled by the statutes and bye-laws limiting the
-numbers of those engaged in this trade. As wife or
-widow women were able to enter either trade equally.
-Both trades were subject to minute supervision in
-the interests of the public, and as a matter of fact,
-from the references which happen to have been preserved,
-it might even appear that the wives of butchers
-were more often interested in the family business
-than the wives of bakers. An Act of Henry VIII.
-“lycensyng all bochers for a tyme to sell vytell in
-grosse at theyr pleasure” makes it lawful for any
-person “to whom any complaynt shuld be made upon
-any Boucher his wyff servaunte or other his mynysters
-refusing to sell the said vitayles by true and lawfull
-weight ... to comytt evry such Boucher
-to warde,”<a id='r482' /><a href='#f482' class='c021'><sup>[482]</sup></a> shows an expectation that the wife
-would act as her husband’s agent. But the wife’s
-position was that of partner, not servant. During the
-first half of the century, certainly, leases were generally
-made conjointly to husband and wife; for example,
-“Phillip Smith and Elizabeth, his wife” appeared before
-the Corporation at Reading “desiringe a new lease
-of the Butcher’s Shambles, which was granted.”<a id='r483' /><a href='#f483' class='c021'><sup>[483]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_217'>217</span>Customs at Nottingham secured the widow’s possession
-of her husband’s business premises even without a
-lease, providing that “when anie Butcher shall dye
-thatt holds a stall or shopp from the towne, thatt
-then his wyefe or sonne shall hould the same stall
-or shopp, they vsinge the same trade, otherwaies
-the towne to dispose thereof to him or them thatt
-will give moste for the stall or shopp: this order to
-bee lykewise to them thatt houlds a stall in the Spice-chambers.”<a id='r484' /><a href='#f484' class='c021'><sup>[484]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The names of women appear in lists of butchers
-in very similar proportions to the lists of bakers.
-Thus one for Chester gives the names of twenty men
-followed by three women,<a id='r485' /><a href='#f485' class='c021'><sup>[485]</sup></a> and in a return of sixteen
-butchers licensed to sell meat in London during Lent,
-there is one woman, Mary Wright, and her partner,
-William Woodfield.<a id='r486' /><a href='#f486' class='c021'><sup>[486]</sup></a> Bye-laws which control the
-sale of meat use the feminine as well as the masculine
-pronouns, showing that the trade was habitually
-used by both sexes. The “Act for the Settlement
-and well ordering of the several Public Markets within
-the City of London” provides that “all and every
-Country butcher ... Poulterer ...
-Country Farmers, Victuallers Laders or Kidders
-... may there sell, utter and put to open
-shew or sale his, her or their Beef, Mutton, etc., etc.”<a id='r487' /><a href='#f487' class='c021'><sup>[487]</sup></a>
-It may be supposed that these provisions relate only
-to the sale of meat, and that women would not often
-be associated with the businesses which included
-slaughtering the beasts, but this is not the case.
-Elizabeth Clarke is mentioned in the Dorchester
-Records as “apprenticed 7 years to her father a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_218'>218</span>butcher,”<a id='r488' /><a href='#f488' class='c021'><sup>[488]</sup></a> and other references occur to women who
-were clearly engaged in the genuine butcher’s trade.
-For example, a licence was granted “to Jane Fouches
-of the Parish of St. Clement Danes, Butcher to kill
-and sell flesh during Lent,”<a id='r489' /><a href='#f489' class='c021'><sup>[489]</sup></a> and among eighteen
-persons who were presented at the Court Leet,
-Manchester, “for Cuttinge &amp; gnashing of Rawhides
-for their seuerall Gnashinge of evry Hyde,” two were
-women, “Ellen Jaques of Ratchdale, one hyde, Widdow
-namely Stott of Ratchdale, two hydes.”<a id='r490' /><a href='#f490' class='c021'><sup>[490]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Beside these women, who by marriage or apprenticeship
-had acquired the full rights of butchers and were
-acknowledged as such by the Corporation under
-whose governance they lived, a multitude of poor
-women tried to keep their families from starvation
-by hawking meat from door to door. They are often
-mentioned in the Council Records, because the
-very nature of their business rendered them continually
-liable to a prosecution for regrating. Thus
-at the Court Leet, Manchester, Anne Costerdyne
-was fined 1<i>s.</i> “for buyinge 4 quarters of Mutton of
-Wᵐ. Walmersley &amp; 1 Lamb of Thomas Hulme both wᶜʰ
-shee shold the one &amp; same day.”<a id='r491' /><a href='#f491' class='c021'><sup>[491]</sup></a> Their position was
-the more difficult, because if they did not sell the
-meat the same day sometimes it went bad, and they
-were then prosecuted on another score. Elizabeth
-Chorlton, a butcher’s widow, was presented in
-1648 “for buieing and sellinge both on one day”
-and was fined 3<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i><a id='r492' /><a href='#f492' class='c021'><sup>[492]</sup></a> She was again fined with
-Mary Shalcross and various men in 1650 for selling
-unlawful meat and buying and selling on one day.<a id='r493' /><a href='#f493' class='c021'><sup>[493]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_219'>219</span>She was presented yet again in 1653 for selling “stinking
-meate,” and fined 5<i>s.</i><a id='r494' /><a href='#f494' class='c021'><sup>[494]</sup></a> Evidently Elizabeth Chorlton
-was an undesirable character, for she had previously
-been convicted of selling by false weights;<a id='r495' /><a href='#f495' class='c021'><sup>[495]</sup></a> nevertheless
-it seems hard that when it was illegal to sell stinking
-meat women should also be fined for selling it on the
-same day they bought it, and though this particular
-woman was dishonest no fault is imputed to the character
-of many of the others who were similarly presented
-for regrating.</p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>There remains yet another class of women who
-were connected with the Butchers’ trade, namely
-the wives of men who were either employed by the
-master butchers, or who perhaps earned a precarious
-living by slaughtering pigs and other beasts destined
-for domestic consumption. In such work there was
-no place for the wife’s assistance, and, like other wage-earners,
-in spite of any efforts she might make in other
-directions, the family remained below the poverty
-line. An instance may be quoted from the Norwich
-Records where, in a census of the poor (i.e. persons
-needing Parish Relief) taken in 1570, are given the
-names of “John Hubbard of the age of 38 yeres,
-butcher, that occupie slaughterie, and Margarit his
-wyfe of the age of 30 yeres that sell souce, and 2 young
-children, and have dwelt here ever.”<a id='r496' /><a href='#f496' class='c021'><sup>[496]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'><i>Fishwives.</i>—There is no reason to suppose that
-women were often engaged in the larger transactions
-of fishmongers. Indeed an English writer, describing
-the Dutchwomen who were merchants of fish, expressly
-says that they were a very different class from
-the women who sold fish in England, and who were
-commonly known as fisherwives.<a id='r497' /><a href='#f497' class='c021'><sup>[497]</sup></a> Nevertheless that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_220'>220</span>in this, as in other trades, they shared to some extent
-in their husband’s enterprises, is shown by the presentment
-of “John Frank of New Malton, and Alice his
-wife, for forestalling the markett of divers paniers
-of fishe, buying the same of the fishermen of Runswick
-or Whitbye ... before it came into the
-markett.”<a id='r498' /><a href='#f498' class='c021'><sup>[498]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The position of the sisters of the Fishmongers’ Company,
-London, was recognised to the extent of providing
-them with a livery, an ordinance of 1426 ordaining
-that every year, on the festival of St. Peter, “alle the
-brethren and sustern of the same fratʳnite” should
-go in their new livery to St. Peters’ Church, Cornhill.<a id='r499' /><a href='#f499' class='c021'><sup>[499]</sup></a>
-An ordinance dated 1499 however, requires that no
-fishmonger of the craft shall suffer his wife, or servant,
-to stand in the market to sell fish, unless in his absence.<a id='r500' /><a href='#f500' class='c021'><sup>[500]</sup></a>
-An entry in the Middlesex Quarter Sessions Records
-notes the “discharge of Sarah, daughter of Frances
-Hall. Apprenticed to Rebecca Osmond of the Parish
-of St. Giles’ Without, Cripplegate, ‘fishwoman’.”<a id='r501' /><a href='#f501' class='c021'><sup>[501]</sup></a>
-A member of the important Fishmongers’ Company
-would hardly be designated in this way, and Rebecca
-Osmond must be classed among the “Fishwives”
-who are so often alluded to in accounts of London.
-Their business was often too precarious to admit
-of taking apprentices, and their credit so low that a
-writer in the reign of Charles I., who advocated the
-establishment of “Mounts of Piety” speaks of the
-high rate of interest taken by brokers and pawn-brokers
-“above 400 in the hundred” from “fishwives,
-oysterwomen and others that do crye thinges up and
-downe the streets.”<a id='r502' /><a href='#f502' class='c021'><sup>[502]</sup></a> It was in this humble class of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_221'>221</span>trade rather than in the larger transactions of fishmongers,
-that women were chiefly engaged. In
-London no impediments seem to have been placed
-in the way of their business, but in the provinces
-they, like the women who hawked meat, were persecuted
-under the bye-laws against regrating. At
-Manchester, the wife of John Wilshawe was amerced
-“for buyinge Sparlings [smelts] and sellinge them
-the same day in 6<i>d.</i>”<a id='r503' /><a href='#f503' class='c021'><sup>[503]</sup></a>, while at the same court others
-were fined for selling unmarketable fish.</p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'><i>Brewers</i>:—It has been shown that the position which
-women occupied among butchers and bakers did not
-differ materially from their position in other trades;
-that is to say, the wife generally helped her husband
-in his business, and carried it on after his death;
-but the history of brewing possesses a peculiar interest,
-for apparently the art of brewing was at one time
-chiefly, if not entirely, in the hands of women. This
-is indicated by the use of the feminine term brewster.
-Possibly the use of the masculine or feminine forms
-may never have strictly denoted the sex of the person
-indicated in words such as brewer, brewster, spinner,
-spinster, sempster, sempstress, webber, webster, and
-the gradual disuse of the feminine forms may have
-been due to the grammatical tendencies in the English
-language rather than to the changes which were
-driving women from their place in productive industry;
-but the feminine forms would never have
-arisen in the first place unless women had been engaged
-to some extent in the trades to which they refer,
-and it often happens that the use of the feminine
-pronoun in relation to the term “brewster” and even
-“brewer” shows decisively that female persons are
-indicated. At Beverley a bye-law was made in
-1364 ordaining that “if any of the community abuse
-the affeerers of Brewster-gild for their affeering,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_222'>222</span>in words or otherwise, he shall pay ... to the
-community 6<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i>”<a id='r504' /><a href='#f504' class='c021'><sup>[504]</sup></a> In this case Brewster might
-no more imply a woman’s trade than it does in the
-modern term “Brewster-Sessions,” but in 1371 a
-gallon of beer was ordered to “be sold for 1½<i>d.</i>
-... and if any one offer 1½<i>d.</i> for a gallon of
-beer anywhere in Beverley and the ale-wife will not
-take it, that the purchaser come to the Gild Hall
-and complain of the brewster, and a remedy shall
-be found,”<a id='r505' /><a href='#f505' class='c021'><sup>[505]</sup></a> while a rule made in 1405 orders that
-“no brewster or female seller called tipeler” shall
-“permit strangers to remain after 9 p.m.”<a id='r506' /><a href='#f506' class='c021'><sup>[506]</sup></a> Similar
-references occur in the Records of other Boroughs.
-At Bury the Customs provided in 1327 that “if a
-woman Brewer (Braceresse) can acquit herself with
-her sole hand that she has not sold contrary to the
-assize [of ale] she shall be quit”<a id='r507' /><a href='#f507' class='c021'><sup>[507]</sup></a>; at Torksey “when
-women are asked whether they brew and sell beer
-outside their houses contrary to the assize or no, if
-they say no, they shall have a day at the next
-court to make their law with the third hand,
-with women who live next door on either side or
-with others.”<a id='r508' /><a href='#f508' class='c021'><sup>[508]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>It was ordered at Leicester in 1335 that “no breweress,
-sworn inn-keeper or other shall be so bold as to
-brew except (at the rate of) a gallon of the best for
-1d,”<a id='r509' /><a href='#f509' class='c021'><sup>[509]</sup></a> and though the feminine form of the noun has
-been dropped, the feminine pronoun is still used
-in 1532 when “hytt is enacteyd yᵃᵗ no brwar yᵃᵗ brwys
-to sell, sell aboffe iid the gallan &amp; sche schall typill
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_223'>223</span>be no mesure butt to sell be yᵉ dossyn &amp; yᵉ halfe
-dossyn.”<a id='r510' /><a href='#f510' class='c021'><sup>[510]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The exclusive use of the feminine in these bye-laws
-differs from the expressions used in regard to
-other trades when both the masculine and feminine
-pronouns are habitually employed, suggesting that
-the trade of brewing was on a different basis.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>It must be remembered that before the introduction
-of cheap sugar, beer was considered almost
-equally essential for human existence as bread. Beer
-was drunk at every meal, and formed part of the
-ordinary diet of even small children. Large households
-brewed for their own use, but as many families
-could not afford the necessary apparatus, brewing was
-not only practised as a domestic art, but became
-the trade of certain women who brewed for their
-neighbours. It is interesting to note the steps which
-led to their ultimate exclusion from the trade, though
-many links in the chain of evidence are unfortunately
-missing. In 1532 brewers in Leicester are
-referred to as “sche,” but an Act published in
-1574 shows that the trade had already emerged from
-petticoat government. It declares that “No inhabitantes
-what soeuer that nowe doe or hereafter
-shall in theire howsses vse tiplinge and sellinge of
-ale or beare, shall not brewe the same of theare owne,
-but shall tunne in the same of the common brewars
-therfore appoynted; and none to be common brewars
-but such as nowe doe vse the same, ... and
-non of the said common brewars to sell, or ...
-to tipple ale or beare by retayle ... the
-Brewars shall togeyther become a felloweship. etc.”<a id='r511' /><a href='#f511' class='c021'><sup>[511]</sup></a>
-This separation of brewing from the sale of beer was
-a policy pursued by the government with the object
-of simplifying the collection of excise, but it was
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_224'>224</span>also defended as a means for maintaining the quality
-of the beer brewed. It was ordayned in the Assize for
-Brewers, Anno 23, H. 8, that “Forasmuch as the misterie
-of brewing as a thing very needfull and necessarie
-for the common wealth, hath been alwaies by auncient
-custom &amp; good orders practised &amp; maintained within
-Citties, Corporate Boroughs and market Townes
-of this Realm, by such expert and skilfull persons,
-as eyther were traded and brought up therein, by the
-space of seuen yeares, and as prentizes therin accepted:
-accordingly as in all other Trades and occupations,
-or else well knowne to be such men of skill and honestie,
-in that misterie, as could and would alwaie yeeld unto
-her Maiesties subiects in the commonwealth, such
-good and holsome Ale and Beere, as both in the
-qualitie &amp; for the quantitie thereof, did euer agree
-with the good lawes of the Realme. And especiallie
-to the comfort of the poorer sort of subiectes, who
-most need it, untill of late yeares, sondrie persons ...
-rather seeking their owne private gaine,
-then the publike profite of their countrie, haue not
-onelie erected and set uppe small brewhouses at their
-pleasures: but also brew and utter such Ales and Beere,
-for want of skill in that misterie as both in the prices
-&amp; holesomnes thereof, doth utterlie disagree with
-the good lawes and orders of this Realm; thereby
-also ouerthrowing the greater and more auncient
-brewhouses.” It is therefore recommended that
-these modern brewhouses should be suppressed in
-the interest of the old and better ones.<a id='r512' /><a href='#f512' class='c021'><sup>[512]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The argument reads curiously when one reflects
-how universal had been the small brewhouses in former
-days. The advantages from the excise point of
-view which would be gained by the concentration
-of the trade in a few hands is discussed in a pamphlet
-which remarks that “there is much Mault made in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_225'>225</span>private Families, in some Counties half, if not two
-thirds of the Maults spent, are privately made, and
-undoubtedly as soon as an Imposition is laid upon it,
-much more will, for the advantage they shall gain
-by saving the Excise ... if Mault could
-be forbidden upon a great penalty to be made by any
-persons, but by certain publick Maulsters, this might
-be of availe to increase the Excise.”<a id='r513' /><a href='#f513' class='c021'><sup>[513]</sup></a> The actual
-conditions prevailing in the brewing industry at this
-time are described as follows in another pamphlet.
-Brewers are divided into two classes, “The Brewer
-who brews to sell by great measures, and wholly serves
-other Families by the same; which sort of Brewers
-are only in some few great Cities and Towns, not
-above twenty through the land.... The
-Brewers who brews to sell by retail ... this
-sort of Brewers charges almost only such as drink
-the same in those houses where the same is brewed and
-sold ... and therefore supplies but a small
-proportion of the rest of the land, being that in almost
-all Market Towns, Villages, Hamlets, and private
-houses in the Countrey throughout the land, all the
-Inhabitants brew for themselves, at least by much the
-greatest proportion of what they use.”<a id='r514' /><a href='#f514' class='c021'><sup>[514]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>In order to extend and strengthen their monopoly
-the “Common Brewers” brought forward a scheme
-in 1620, asking for a certain number of common
-brewers to be licensed throughout the kingdom, to
-brew according to assize. All other inn-keepers,
-alehouse keepers and victuallers to be forbidden to
-brew, “these brew irregularly without control,” and
-“offering to pay the King 4<i>d.</i> on every quart of
-malt brewed.” The scheme was referred to the Council
-who recommended “that a proclamation be issued
-forbidding ‘taverners, inn-keepers, etc. to sell any beer
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_226'>226</span>but such as they buy from the brewers.’” To the
-objections “that brewers who were free by service
-or otherwise to use the trade of brewing would refuse
-to take a licence, and when apprentices had served
-their time there would be many who might do so,”
-it was replied that it was “not usual for Brewers
-to take any apprentices but hired servants and the
-stock necessary for the trade is such as few apprentices
-can furnish.”<a id='r515' /><a href='#f515' class='c021'><sup>[515]</sup></a> Thus the rise of the “common brewer”
-signalises the complete victory of capitalistic organisation
-in the brewing trade. In 1636 Commissioners
-were appointed to “compound with persons who
-wished to follow the trade of common Brewers throughout
-the Kingdom.”<a id='r516' /><a href='#f516' class='c021'><sup>[516]</sup></a> The next year returns were
-received by the Council, giving the names and other
-particulars of those concerned in various districts.
-The list for the “Fellowshipp of Brewers now living
-in Newcastle-upon-Tyne with the breath and depth
-of their severall mash tunns” gives the names of fifty-three
-men and three women, widows.<a id='r517' /><a href='#f517' class='c021'><sup>[517]</sup></a> A list of
-such brewers in the County of Essex “as have paid
-their fines and are bound to pay their rent accordingly”<a id='r518' /><a href='#f518' class='c021'><sup>[518]</sup></a>
-(i.e. were licensed by the King’s Commissioners for
-brewing) includes sixty-three men and four women,
-while the names of one hundred and twenty-four
-men and eight women are given in other tables
-containing the amounts due from brewers and
-maultsters in certain other counties,<a id='r519' /><a href='#f519' class='c021'><sup>[519]</sup></a> showing
-that the predominance of women in the brewing
-trade had then disappeared, the few names
-appearing in the lists being no doubt those of
-brewers’ widows.</p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_227'>227</span>The creation of the common brewers’ monopoly
-was very unpopular. At Bury St. Edmunds a petition
-was presented by “a great no. of poor people” to
-the Justices of Assize, saying that for many years
-they had been relieved “by those inn-keepers which
-had the liberty to brew their beer in their own houses,
-not only with money and food, but also at the several
-times of their brewing (being moved with pity and
-compassion, knowing our great extremities and necessities)
-with such quantities of their small beer as
-has been a continual help and comfort to us with our
-poor wives and children: yet of late the common
-brewers, whose number is small and their benefits to
-us the poor as little notwithstanding in their estate
-they are wealthy and occupy great offices of malting,
-under pretence of doing good to the commonwealth,
-have for their own lucre and gain privately
-combined themselves, and procured orders from
-the Privy Council that none shall brew in this town
-but they and their adherents.”<a id='r520' /><a href='#f520' class='c021'><sup>[520]</sup></a> At Tiverton the
-Council was obliged to make a concession to popular
-feeling and agreed that “every person being a freeman
-of the town and not prohibited by law might use
-the trade of Common Brewer as well as the four
-persons formerly licensed by the Commissioners,”
-but the petition that the alehouse keepers and inn-keepers
-might brew as formerly they used was refused,
-“they might brew for their own and families use;
-otherwise to buy from the Common Brewers.”<a id='r521' /><a href='#f521' class='c021'><sup>[521]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The monopoly involved the closing of many small
-businesses. Sarah Kemp a widow, petitioned the
-Council because she had “been forced to give up
-brewing in Whitefriars, and had been at gᵗ loss both
-in removing her implements and in her rents,”
-asking “that in consideration of her loss she might
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_228'>228</span>have license to erect brick houses on her messuage
-in Whitefriars.” This was granted on conditions.<a id='r522' /><a href='#f522' class='c021'><sup>[522]</sup></a>
-A married woman, Mary Arnold, was committed to
-the Fleet on March 31st, 1639, “for continuing to
-brew in a house on the Millbank in Westminster,
-contrary to an order against the brewers in Westminster
-and especially against Michael Arnold.” The Council
-ordered her to be discharged, on her humble admission
-to brew no more in the said house, but to remove
-within ten days; and on bond from her husband
-that neither he nor she nor any other shall brew in
-the said house, and that he will remove his brewing
-vessels within ten days.<a id='r523' /><a href='#f523' class='c021'><sup>[523]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The closing of the trade of brewing to women
-must have seriously reduced their opportunities
-for earning an independance; that they had
-hitherto been extensively engaged in it is shown
-by frequent references to women who were
-brewsters; for example, Mrs. Putland was rated 5<i>s.</i>
-on her brew-house;<a id='r524' /><a href='#f524' class='c021'><sup>[524]</sup></a> Jennet Firbank, wife of
-Steph. Firbank, of Awdbroughe, a recusant, was presented
-at Richmond for brewing, a side note adding
-“she to be put down from brueing.”<a id='r525' /><a href='#f525' class='c021'><sup>[525]</sup></a> Margaret,
-the wife of Ambrose Carleton and Marye Barton were
-presented at Carlisle for “brewing (being foryners)
-and therefore we doe emercye either of them viˢ 8<i>d.</i>”<a id='r526' /><a href='#f526' class='c021'><sup>[526]</sup></a>
-At Thirske, Widow Harrington, of Hewton, Chr.
-Whitecake, of Bransbie, Rob. Goodricke, of the same
-(for his wife’s offence) were presented, all for brewing.<a id='r527' /><a href='#f527' class='c021'><sup>[527]</sup></a>
-And at Malton, a few years later, “Rob. Driffeld,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_229'>229</span>a brewster of Easingwold, was presented for suffering
-unlawful games att cardes to be used at unlawful times
-in the night in his house ... and the wife
-of the said Driffeld for that she will not sell anie of
-her ale forth of doores except it be to those whom
-she likes on and makes her ale of 2 or thre sortes,
-nor will let anie of her poore neighbours have anie
-of her drincke called small ale, but she saith she will
-rather give it to her Swyne then play it for them.”<a id='r528' /><a href='#f528' class='c021'><sup>[528]</sup></a>
-Isabell Bagley and Janyt Lynsley “both of Cowburne
-bruesters” were fined 10<i>s.</i> each “for suffering play
-at cardes in their houses, &amp;c,”<a id='r529' /><a href='#f529' class='c021'><sup>[529]</sup></a> and at Norwich,
-Judith Bowde, brewer, was fined 2<i>s.</i> 9<i>d.</i><a id='r530' /><a href='#f530' class='c021'><sup>[530]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Although women had lost their position in the
-brewing trade by the end of the seventeenth century,
-they were still often employed in brewing for domestic
-purposes. Sometimes one of the women servants
-on a large farm, brewed for the whole family, including
-all the farm servants.<a id='r531' /><a href='#f531' class='c021'><sup>[531]</sup></a> In other cases a
-woman made her living by brewing for different
-families in their own houses. Thus in the account
-of a fire on the premises of a certain Mr. Reading
-it is described how his “Family were Brewing within
-this Place.... The Servants who were in
-the House perceiving a great smoak rose out of Bed,
-and the Maid running out cried Fire and said <i>Wo
-worth this Bookers wife</i> (who was the Person whom
-Mr. <i>Reading</i> imployed to be his Brewer) <i>she hath
-undone us</i>.”<a id='r532' /><a href='#f532' class='c021'><sup>[532]</sup></a> Lady Grizell Baillie enters in her
-Household Account Book, “For Brewing 7 bolls
-Malt by Mrs. Ainsly 10<i>s.</i> For a ston hopes to
-the said Malt out of which I had a puntion very
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_230'>230</span>strong Ale 10 gallons good 2nd ale and four puntions
-of Beer. 14<i>s.</i>”<a id='r533' /><a href='#f533' class='c021'><sup>[533]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Naturally the women who brewed for domestic
-purposes sometimes wished to turn an honest penny
-by selling beer to thirsty neighbours at Fairs and
-on Holidays, but attempts to do so were severely
-punished. Annes Nashe of Welling, was presented
-“for selling beer by small jugs at Woolmer Grene
-and for laying her donng in the highway leading from
-Stevenage to London.”<a id='r534' /><a href='#f534' class='c021'><sup>[534]</sup></a> A letter to a Somerset
-Magistrate pleads for another offender:—“Good
-Mr. Browne, all happiness attend you. This poor
-woman is arrested with Peace proces for selling
-ale without lycense and will assure you shee hath
-reformed it and that upon the first warning of our
-officers ever since Easter last, which is our fayre tyme,
-when most commonly our poore people doe
-offend in that kinde; I pray you doe her what lawful
-kindness you may, and hope she will recompense you
-for your paynes, and I shall be ready to requite it
-in what I may, for if she be committed she is absolutely
-undone. Thus hoping of your favour I leave you to
-God and to this charitable work towards this poor
-woman. Your unfeined friend, Hum. Newman.”<a id='r535' /><a href='#f535' class='c021'><sup>[535]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Though with the growth of capitalism and the
-establishment of a monopoly for “Common Brewers”
-women were virtually excluded from their old trade
-of brewing, they still maintained their position in the
-retail trade, their hold upon which was favoured
-by the same circumstances which turned their energies
-to the retail side of other businesses.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>A tendency was shown by public opinion to regard
-licences as suitable provision for invalids and widows
-who might otherwise require assistance from the rates.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_231'>231</span>Thus an attempt made at Lincoln in 1628 to
-reduce the numbers of licences was modified, “for
-that it appeareth that divers poor men and widows,
-not freemen, have no other means of livelihood
-but by keeping of alehouses, it is agreed that such as
-shall be approved by the justices may be re-admitted,
-but that none hereafter be newly admitted untill
-they be first sworn freemen.”<a id='r536' /><a href='#f536' class='c021'><sup>[536]</sup></a> According to a pamphlet
-published early in the next century, “Ale-houses
-were originally Accounted Neusances in the <i>Parish’s</i>
-where they were, as tending to Debauch the Subject,
-and make the People idle, and therefore Licences
-to sell Beer and Ale, where allow’d to none, but Ancient
-People past their Labours, and Invalides to keep them
-from Starving, there being then no <i>Act of Parliament</i>
-that <i>Parishes</i> should Maintain their own Poor. But
-the Primitive Intention in granting Licences being
-now perverted, and all sorts of People Admitted
-to this priviledge, it is but reason the Publick should
-have some Advantage by the Priviledges it grants....”<a id='r537' /><a href='#f537' class='c021'><sup>[537]</sup></a>
-Many examples of this attitude of mind can be observed
-in the Quarter Sessions Records. For instance,
-Mary Briggs when a widow was licensed by the
-Hertfordshire Quarter Sessions to sell drink, and by
-the good order she kept in her house and the goodness
-of the drink she uttered and sold she got a good livelihood,
-and brought up three children she had by
-a former husband. She married John Briggs, woodard
-and servant to Lord Ashton, she continuing her business
-and he his. Her husband was returned as a papist
-recusant, and on his refusing to take oaths the court
-suppressed their alehouse. Mrs. Briggs appealed on
-the ground that her business was carried on separately
-and by it she maintained her children by her former
-husband. Her claim was supported by a petition
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_232'>232</span>from her fellow parishioners, declaring that John
-Briggs was employed by Lord Ashton and “meddles
-not with his wife’s trade of victualling and selling
-drink.”<a id='r538' /><a href='#f538' class='c021'><sup>[538]</sup></a> Other examples may be found in an order
-for the suppression of Wm. Brightfoot’s licence who
-had “by surprize” obtained one for selling beer ...
-showing that he was a young man, and capable to
-maintain his family without keeping an alehouse,<a id='r539' /><a href='#f539' class='c021'><sup>[539]</sup></a>
-and the petition of John Phips, of Stondon, labourer,
-lately fallen into great need for want of work. He
-can get very little to do among his neighbours, “because
-they have little for him to do, having so many poore
-laborious men besides within the said parish.” He
-asks for a licence to sell beer “for his better livelihood
-and living hereafter, towards the mayntenance of
-himself, his poor wife and children.”<a id='r540' /><a href='#f540' class='c021'><sup>[540]</sup></a> Licences were
-refused at Bristol to “John Keemis, Cooper, not
-fit to sell ale, having no child; he keeps a tapster
-which is no freeman that have a wife and child,” and
-also to “Richard Rooke, shipwright, not fit to sell
-ale, having no child, and brews themselves.” A Barber
-Surgeon was disqualified, having no child, “and also
-for entertaining a strange maid which is sick.”<a id='r541' /><a href='#f541' class='c021'><sup>[541]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Very rarely were doubts suggested as to the propriety
-of the trade for women, though a bye-law was passed
-at Chester ordaining that “no woman between the
-age of xiii &amp; xl yeares shall kepe any taverne or ale-howse.”<a id='r542' /><a href='#f542' class='c021'><sup>[542]</sup></a>
-At times complaints were made of the conduct
-of alewives, as in a request to the Justices of
-Nottingham “that your Worshipps wyll take some
-order wythe all the alewyfes in this towne, for we thinke
-that never an alewyfe dothe as hir husband is bownd
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_233'>233</span>to,”<a id='r543' /><a href='#f543' class='c021'><sup>[543]</sup></a> but there is no evidence of any marked difference
-in the character of the alehouses kept by men and
-those kept by women. The trade included women
-of the most diverse characters. One, who received
-stolen goods at the sign of the “Leabord’s Head” in
-Ware, had there a “priviye place” for hiding stolen
-goods and suspicious persons “at the press for
-soldiers she hid five men from the constables, and
-can convey any man from chamber to chamber into
-the backside. There is not such a house for the
-purpose within a hundred miles.”<a id='r544' /><a href='#f544' class='c021'><sup>[544]</sup></a> In contrast to
-her may be quoted the landlady of the Inn at Truro,
-of whom Celia Fiennes wrote, “My Greatest pleasure
-was the good Landlady I had, she was but an ordinary
-plaine woman but she was understanding in the best
-things as most—yᵉ Experience of reall religion and her
-quiet submission and self-Resignation to yᵉ will of
-God in all things, and especially in yᵉ placeing her in
-a remoteness to yᵉ best advantages of hearing, and being
-in such a publick Employment wᶜʰ she desired and
-aimed at yᵉ discharging so as to adorn yᵉ Gospel of
-her Lord and Saviour, and the Care of her children.”<a id='r545' /><a href='#f545' class='c021'><sup>[545]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'><i>Vintners</i>:—The trade of the Vintner had no connection
-with that of the Brewer. Wine was sold in
-Taverns. In London the Vintners’ Company, like
-the other London Companies, possessed privileges
-which were continued to the wife upon her husband’s
-death, but women were probably not concerned in
-the trade on their own account. A survey of all the
-Taverns in London made in 1633 gives a total of
-211, whereof six are licensed by His Majesty, 203
-by the Vintners’ Company and two are licensed
-by neither, one is unlicensed, “inhabited by An
-Tither, whoe lately made a tavern of the Starr on
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_234'>234</span>Tower Hill where shee also keepes a victualling house
-unlicensed.” One licensed by the Earl of Middlesex.
-Amongst those duly licensed are the names of a few
-widows. In Cordwainer Street Ward, there was
-only one Tavern, “kept by a widdowe whose deceased
-husband was bound prentice to a Vintener and so
-kept his taverne by vertue of his freedome of that
-companye after his termes of apprentizhood expired.”<a id='r546' /><a href='#f546' class='c021'><sup>[546]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-<h3 class='c032'><i>Conclusion.</i></h3>
-
-<p class='c029'>The foregoing examination of the relation of women
-to the different crafts and trades has shown them
-occupying an assured position wherever the system
-of family industry prevailed. While this lasted the
-detachment of married women from business is
-nowhere assumed, but they are expected to assist
-their husband, and during his absence or after his
-death to take his place as head of the family and manager
-of the business.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The economic position held by women depended
-upon whether the business was carried on at home or
-elsewhere, and upon the possession of a small amount
-of capital. The wives of men who worked as journeymen
-on their masters’ premises could not share their
-husbands’ trade, and their choice of independent
-occupations was very limited. The skilled women’s
-trades, such as millinery and mantua-making, were
-open, and in these, though apprenticeship was usual,
-there is no reason to suppose that women who worked
-in them without having served an apprenticeship,
-were prosecuted; but as has been shown the
-apprenticeship laws were strictly enforced in other
-directions, and in some cases prevented women from
-using their domestic skill to earn their living.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>While women could share their husbands’
-trades they suffered little from these restrictions,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_235'>235</span>but with the development of capitalistic organisation
-the numbers of women who could find no outlet for
-their productive activity in partnership with their
-husbands were increasing and their opportunities for
-establishing an independent industry did not keep
-pace; on the contrary, such industry became ever
-more difficult. The immediate result is obscure, but
-it seems probable that the wife of the prosperous
-capitalist tended to become idle, the wife of the skilled
-journeyman lost her economic independence and
-became his unpaid domestic servant, while the wives
-of other wage-earners were driven into the sweated
-industries of that period. What were the respective
-numbers in each class cannot be determined, but it
-is probable that throughout the seventeenth century
-they were still outnumbered by the women who
-could find scope for productive activity in their
-husbands’ business.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c001' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_236'>236</span>
- <h2 class='c011'><span class='sc'>Chapter VI</span><br /> <br />PROFESSIONS</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c038'><i>Introductory</i>—Tendencies similar to those in
-Industry.—Army—Church—Law closed to women. Teaching—Nursing—Medicine
-chiefly practised by women as domestic arts. Midwifery.</p>
-
-<p class='c039'>(A). <i>Nursing.</i> The sick poor nursed in lay institutions—London
-Hospitals—Dublin—Supplied by low class women—Women searchers for
-the plague—Nurses for small-pox or plague—Hired nurses in private families.</p>
-
-<p class='c039'>(B) <i>Medicine.</i> Women’s skill in Middle ages—Medicine practised extensively
-by women in seventeenth century in their families, among their friends
-and for the poor—Also by the village wise woman for pay—Exclusiveness of
-associations of physicians, surgeons and apothecaries.</p>
-
-<p class='c039'>(C) <i>Midwifery.</i> A woman’s profession—Earlier history unknown—Raynold’s
-translation of “the byrthe of mankynd.”—Relative dangers of
-childbirth in seventeenth and twentieth centuries—Importance of midwives—Character
-of their training—Jane Sharp—Nicholas Culpepper—Peter Chamberlain—Mrs.
-Cellier’s scheme for training—Superiority of French training—Licences
-of Midwives—Attitude of the Church to them—Fees—Growing
-tendency to displace midwives by Doctors.</p>
-
-<p class='c039'><i>Conclusion.</i> Women’s position in the arts of teaching and healing lost as these
-arts became professional.</p>
-<h3 class='c032'><i>Introductory.</i></h3>
-
-<p class='c044'><span class='sc'>Similar</span> tendencies to those which affected the
-industrial position of women can be traced in the
-professions also, showing that, important as was the
-influence of capitalistic organisation in the history of
-women’s evolution, other powerful factors were working
-in the same direction.</p>
-<p class='c013'>Three professions were closed to women in the
-seventeenth century, Arms, the Church and the Law.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'><i>The Law.</i>—It must be remembered that the mass of
-the “common people” were little affected by “the law”
-before the seventeenth century. “Common law”
-was the law of the nobles,<a id='r547' /><a href='#f547' class='c021'><sup>[547]</sup></a> while farming people and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_237'>237</span>artizans alike were chiefly regulated in their dealings
-with each other by customs depending for interpretation
-and sanction upon a public opinion which
-represented women as well as men. Therefore the
-changes which during the seventeenth century were
-abrogating customs in favour of common law, did
-in effect eliminate women from what was equivalent
-to a share in the custody and interpretation of law,
-which henceforward remained exclusively in the hands
-of men. The result of the elimination of the feminine
-influence is plainly shown in a succession of laws,
-which, in order to secure complete liberty to individual
-men, destroyed the collective idea of the family, and
-deprived married women and children of the property
-rights which customs had hitherto secured to them.
-From this time also the administration of the law
-becomes increasingly perfunctory in enforcing the fulfilment
-of men’s responsibilities to their wives and
-children.</p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'><i>Church</i>.—According to modern ideas, religion
-pertains more to women than to men, but this conception
-is new, dating from the scientific era.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Science has solved so many of the problems which
-in former days threatened the existence of mankind,
-that the “man in the street” instinctively relegates
-religion to the region in which visible beauty, poetry
-and music are still permitted to linger; to the ornamental
-sphere in short, whither the Victorian gentleman
-also banished his wife and daughters. This
-attitude forms a singular contrast to the ideas which
-prevailed in the Middle Ages, when men believed
-that supernatural assistance was their sole protection
-against the “pestilence that walketh in darkness”
-or from “the arrow that flieth by day.” Religion was
-then held to be such an awful power that there were
-men who even questioned whether women could,
-properly speaking, be considered religious at all.
-Even in the seventeenth century the practice of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_238'>238</span>religion and the holding of correct ideas concerning
-it were deemed to be essential for the maintenance
-of human existence, and no suggestion was then
-made that religious observances could be adequately
-performed by women alone.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Ideas as to the respective appropriateness of
-religious power to men and women have differed
-widely; some races have reserved the priesthood for
-men, while others have recognised a special power
-enduing women; in the history of others again no
-uniform tendency is shown, but the two influences can
-be traced acting and reacting upon each other.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>This has been the case with the Christian religion,
-which has combined the wide-spread worship of the
-Mother and Child with a passionate splitting of hairs
-by celibate priests in dogmatic controversies concerning
-intellectual abstractions. The worship of
-the Mother and Child had been extirpated in England
-before the beginning of the seventeenth century;
-pictures of this subject were denounced because they
-showed the Divine Son under the domination of a
-woman. One writer accuses the Jesuits of representing
-Christ always “as a sucking child in his
-mothers armes”—“nay, that is nothing they make
-him an underling to a woman,” alleging that “the
-Jesuits assert (1) no man, but a woman did helpe
-God in the work of our Redemption, (2) that God
-made Mary partaker and fellow with him of his
-divine Majesty and power, (3) that God hath divided
-his Kingdom with Mary, keeping Justice to himselfe,
-and yielding mercy to her.” He complains that
-“She is always set forth as a woman and a mother,
-and he as a child and infant, either in her armes,
-or in her hand, that so the common people might
-have occasion to imagine that looke, what power of
-overruling and commanding the mother hath over
-her little child, the same hath she over her son Jesus
-... the mother is compared to the son, not
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_239'>239</span>as being a child or a man, but as the saviour and
-mediator, and the paps of a woman equalled with
-the wounds of our Lord, and her milke with his
-blood.... But for her the holy scriptures
-speake no more of her, but as of a creature, a woman
-... saved by Faith in her Saviour Jesus
-Christ ... and yet now after 1600 yeares
-she must still be a commanding mother and must
-show her authority over him ... she must be
-saluted as a lady, a Queen, a goddesse and he as a child.”<a id='r548' /><a href='#f548' class='c021'><sup>[548]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The ridicule with which Peter Heylin treated the
-worship of the Virgin Mary in France seems to have
-been pointed more at the notion of honouring
-motherhood, rather than at the distinction given
-to her as a woman, for he wrote “if they will worship
-her as a Nurse with her Child in her arms, or at her
-breast, let them array her in such apparel as might
-beseem a Carpenter’s Wife, such as she might be
-supposed to have worn before the world had taken
-notice that she was the Mother of her Saviour.
-If they must needs have her in her state of glory
-as at Amiens; or of honour (being now publikely
-acknowledged to be the blessedness among Women)
-as at Paris: let them disburden her of her Child.
-To clap them thus both together, is a folly equally
-worthy of scorn &amp; laughter.”<a id='r549' /><a href='#f549' class='c021'><sup>[549]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The reform which had swept away the worship
-of divine motherhood had also abolished the enforced
-celibacy of the priesthood; but the priest’s wife
-was given no position in the Church, and a tendency
-may be noted towards the secularisation of all women’s
-functions. Convents and nunneries were abolished,
-and no institutions which might specially assist
-women in the performance of their spiritual, educational
-or charitable duties were established in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_240'>240</span>their place. There was, in fact, a deep jealousy
-of any influence which might disturb the authority
-and control which the individual husband exercised
-over his wife, and probably the seventeenth century
-Englishman was beginning to realise that nothing
-would be so subversive to this authority as the association
-of women together for religious purposes.
-If a recognised position was given to women in the
-Church, their lives must inevitably receive an
-orientation which would not necessarily be identical
-with their husband’s, thus creating a danger of
-conflicting loyalties. Naturally, therefore, women
-were excluded from any office, but it would be a
-mistake to suppose that their subordination to their
-husbands in religious matters was rigidly enforced
-throughout this period. Certainly in the first half
-of the century their freedom of thought in religion
-was usually taken for granted, and possibly amongst
-the Baptists, certainly amongst the Quakers, full
-spiritual equality was accorded to them. Women
-were universally admitted to the sacraments, and
-therefore recognised as being, in some sort, members
-of the Church, but this was consistent with the view
-of their position to which Milton’s well known
-lines in “Paradise Lost” give perfect expression,
-the ideal which, in all subsequent social and political
-changes, was destined to determine women’s position
-in Church and State:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c030'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Whence true authoritie in men, though both</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Not equal, as their sex not equal seem’d,</div>
- <div class='line in1'>For contemplation hee and valour form’d</div>
- <div class='line in1'>For softness shee, and sweet attractive Grace,</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Hee for God only, shee for God in him:</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in6'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*</div>
- <div class='line in1'>To whom thus Eve with perfect beauty adornd</div>
- <div class='line in1'>My Author and Disposer, what thou bidst</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Unargu’d I obey; so God ordains,</div>
- <div class='line in1'>God is thy Law, thou mine; to know no more</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Is woman’s happiest knowledge and her praise.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c029'><span class='pageno' id='Page_241'>241</span>Nevertheless, though excluded from any position
-in the hierarchy of recognised servants of the Church,
-it must not be supposed that the Church was independent
-of women’s service. To their hands
-necessity rather than the will of man had entrusted a
-duty, which when unfulfilled makes all the complicated
-organisation of the Church impotent; namely, the
-bending of the infant mind and soul towards religious
-ideals and emotions. The lives of the reformers
-of the seventeenth century bear witness to the
-faithfulness with which women accomplished this
-task. In many cases their religious labours were
-extended beyond the care of their children, embracing
-the whole household for their field of service. The
-life of Letice, Viscountess Falkland, gives an example
-of the sense of responsibility under which
-many religious women lived. Lady Falkland
-passed about an hour with her maids, early every
-morning “in praying, and catechizing and instructing
-them; to these secret and private prayers, the
-publick morning and evening prayers of the Church,
-before dinner and supper; and another form (together
-with reading Scriptures and singing Psalms) before
-bedtime, were daily and constantly added ...
-neither were these holy offices appropriate to her
-menial servants, others came freely to joyn with
-them, and her Oratory was as open to her neighbours
-as her Hall was ... her Servants were all
-moved to accompany her to the Sacrament, and they
-who were prevailed with gave up their names to her,
-two or three dayes before, and from thence, she applied
-herself to the instructing of them ... and
-after the Holy Sacrament she called them together
-again and gave them such exhortations as were
-proper for them.”<a id='r550' /><a href='#f550' class='c021'><sup>[550]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The quarrel between Church and State over the
-teaching profession is an old story which does not
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_242'>242</span>concern this investigation. It is sufficient to note
-that in England neither Church nor State considered
-that the work of women in training the young entitled
-them to a recognised position in the general social
-organisation, or required any provision apart from the
-casual arrangements of family life.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'><i>Teaching.</i>—The question of the standard and
-character of the education given to girls is too large
-a subject to be entered into here; it can only be
-remarked that the number of professional paid women
-teachers was small. The natural aptitude of the
-average woman for training the young, however,
-enabled mothers to provide their children, both boys
-and girls, with a very useful foundation of elementary
-education.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The professions of medicine, midwifery and nursing
-are very closely allied to each other; for neither was
-there any system of instruction on a scientific basis
-available for women, whose practice was thus empirical;
-but as yet science had done little to improve the skill
-even of the male practitioner.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'><i>Nursing.</i>—Nursing was almost wholly a domestic art.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'><i>Medicine.</i>—Though we find many references to
-women who practised medicine and surgery as professions,
-in the majority of cases their skill was used
-only for the assistance of their family and neighbours.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'><i>Midwifery.</i>—Midwifery was upon a different footing,
-standing out as the most important public function
-exercised by women, and being regarded as their
-inviolable mystery till near the beginning of the
-seventeenth century. The steady process through
-which in this profession women were then supplanted
-by men, furnishes an example of the way in which
-women have lost their hold upon all branches of
-skilled responsible work, through being deprived
-of opportunities for specialised training.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The relative deterioration of woman’s capacity
-in comparison with the standard of men’s efficiency
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_243'>243</span>cannot be more clearly shown than in the history of
-midwifery. Even though the actual skill of midwives
-may not have declined during the seventeenth
-century men were rapidly surpassing them in scientific
-knowledge, for the general standard of women’s
-education was declining, and they were debarred
-from access to the higher branches of learning.
-As the absence of technical training kept women out
-of the skilled trades, so did the lack of scientific education
-drive them from the more profitable practice
-of midwifery, which in former times tradition and
-prejudice had reserved as their monopoly.</p>
-<h3 class='c032'>A. <i>Nursing.</i></h3>
-
-<p class='c029'>Whatever arrangements had been made by the
-religious orders in England for the care of the sick
-poor were swept away by the Reformation. The
-provision which existed in the seventeenth century
-for this purpose rested on a lay basis, quite unconnected
-with the Church. Amongst the most famous charitable
-institutions were the four London Hospitals;
-Christ’s Hospital for children under the age of sixteen,
-St. Bartholomew’s and St. Thomas’s for the sick and
-impotent poor, and Bethlehem for the insane.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>There is no evidence that the women of the upper
-classes took any part in the management of these
-hospitals. The squalor and the ugly and disgusting
-details which are associated with nursing the diseased
-and often degraded poor, was unredeemed by the
-radiance with which a mystic realisation of the Divine
-Presence had upheld the Catholic Saints, or by the
-passionate desire for the service of humanity which
-inspired Florence Nightingale. Thus it was only
-the necessity for earning their daily bread which
-induced any women to enter the profession of nursing
-during this period, and as the salaries offered were
-considerably lower than the wages earned by a competent
-servant in London, it may be supposed that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_244'>244</span>the class attracted did not represent the most efficient
-type of women.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The rules appointed for the governance of nurses
-show that the renunciations of a nun’s life were required
-of them, but social opinion in Protestant England set
-no seal of excellence upon their work, however faithfully
-performed, and the sacrifices demanded from the
-nurses were unrewarded by the crown of victory.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>During the reign of Edward VI. there were a
-matron and twelve sisters at St. Bartholomew’s who
-received in wages £26 6<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i> In addition the matron
-received 1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> per week for board wages and the
-sisters 1<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i> per week, and between them £6 per year
-for livery, while the matron received 13<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i> for this
-purpose.<a id='r551' /><a href='#f551' class='c021'><sup>[551]</sup></a> The rules for the governance of the sisters
-were as follows:—“Your charge is, in all Things to
-declare and shew yourselves gentle, diligent, and
-obedient to the Matron of this House, who is appointed
-and authorised to be your chief Governess and Ruler.
-Ye shall also faithfully and charitably serve and
-help the Poor in all their Griefs and Diseases, as well
-by keeping them sweet and clean, as in giving them
-their Meats and Drinks, after the most honest and
-comfortable Manner. Also ye shall use unto them
-good and honest Talk, such as may comfort and amend
-them; and utterly to avoid all light, wanton, and
-foolish Words, Gestures, and Manners, using yourselves
-unto them with all Sobriety and Discretion, and above
-all Things, see that ye avoid, abhor, and detest Scolding
-and Drunkenness as most pestilent and filthy Vices.
-Ye shall not haunt or resort to any manner of Person
-out of this House, except ye be licensed by the Matron;
-neither shall ye suffer any light Person to haunt or
-use unto you, neither any dishonest Person, Man or
-Woman; and so much as in you shall lie, ye shall avoid
-and shun the Conversation and Company of all Men.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_245'>245</span>Ye shall not be out of the Woman’s Ward after the
-Hour of seven of the Clock in the Night, in the Winter
-Time, nor after Nine of the Clock in the Night in the
-Summer: except ye shall be appointed and commanded
-by the Matron so to be, for some great and special
-cause that shall concern the Poor, (as the present
-Danger of Death or extreme Sickness), and yet so
-being commanded, ye shall remain no longer with
-such diseased Person than just Cause shall require.
-Also, if any just Cause of Grief shall fortune unto any
-of you, or that ye shall see Lewdness in any Officer,
-of other Person of this House, which may sound or
-grow to the Hurt or Slander thereof, ye shall declare
-the same to the Matron, or unto one or two of the
-Govenours of this House, that speedy Remedy therein
-may be had; and to no other Person neither shall ye
-talk or meddle therein any farther. This is your
-Charge, and with any other Thing you are not
-charged.”<a id='r552' /><a href='#f552' class='c021'><sup>[552]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The Matron was instructed to “receive of the
-Hospitaler of this House all such sick and diseased
-Persons as he ... shall present unto you,”
-and to “have also Charge, Governance &amp; Order of all the
-Sisters of this House ... that every of them ...
-do their Duty unto the Poor, as well in making of
-their Beds, and keeping their Wards, as also in washing
-and purging their unclean Cloaths, and other Things.
-And that the same Sisters every night after the Hour
-of seven of the Clock in the Winter, and nine of the
-Clock in the Summer, come not out of the Woman’s
-Ward, except some great and special Cause (as the
-present Danger of Death, or needful Succour of some
-poor Person). And yet at such a special time it shall
-not be lawful for every Sister to go forth to any Person or
-Persons (no tho’ it be in her Ward) but only for such as
-you shall think virtuous, godly, and discreet. And the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_246'>246</span>same Sister to remain no longer with the same sick
-Person then needful Cause shall require. Also at
-such times as the Sisters shall not be occupied about
-the Poor, ye shall set them to spinning or doing some
-other Manner of Work, that may avoid Idleness, and
-be profitable to the Poor of this House. Also ye
-shall receive the Flax ... the same being
-spun by the Sisters, ye shall commit to the said Governors....
-You shall also ... have
-special Regard to the good ordering &amp; keeping of all
-the Sheets, Coverlets, Blankets, Beds, and other
-Implements committed to your Charge, ...
-Also ye shall suffer no poor Person of this House to
-sit and drink within your House at no Time, neither
-shall ye so send them drink into their Wards, that
-thereby Drunkenness might be used and continued
-among them.”<a id='r553' /><a href='#f553' class='c021'><sup>[553]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>In Christ’s Hospital there were two Matrons
-with salaries of £2 13<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i> per annum and forty-two
-women keepers with salaries of 40<i>s.</i> per annum.
-Board wages were allowed at the rate of 1<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i>
-per week for the “keepers” and 1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> for the
-Matrons. There was one keeper for fifteen persons.<a id='r554' /><a href='#f554' class='c021'><sup>[554]</sup></a>
-The Matron was advised “Your office is an office of
-great charge and credite. For to yow is committed
-the Governance and oversight of all the women and
-children within this Hospital. And also to yow is
-given Authoritie to commaunde, reprove, and rebuke
-them or any of them.... Your charge is
-also to searche and enquire whether the women do
-their Dutie, in washing of the children’s sheets and
-shirts, and in kepeing clean and sweet those that are
-committed to their Charge; and also in the Beddes,
-Sheets, Coverlets, and Apparails (with kepeing clean
-Wards and Chambers) mending of such as shall be
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_247'>247</span>broken from Time to Time. And specially yow shall
-give diligent Hede, that the said Washers and Nurses
-of this Howse be alwaies well occupied and not idle;
-... you shal also once every Quarter of the
-Year examine the Inventorie.”<a id='r555' /><a href='#f555' class='c021'><sup>[555]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The nurses were instructed that they must “carefully
-and diligently oversee, kepe, and governe all
-those tender Babes &amp; yonglings that shal be committed
-to your Charge, and the same holesomely, cleanely
-and swetely nourishe and bring up ... kepe
-your Wardes and every Part thereof swete and cleane
-... avoid all Idleness when your Charge and
-Care of keping the Children is past, occupie yourselves
-in Spinning, Sewing, mending of Sheets and
-Shirts, or some other vertuous Exercise, such as you
-shal be appointed unto. Ye shal not resort or suffer
-any Man to resort to you, before ye have declared
-the same to the almoners or Matron of this Howse
-and obtained their Lycense and Favour, so to do
-... see that all your children, before they be
-brought to Bed, be washed and cleane, and immediately
-after, every one of yow quietly shal go to your
-Bed, and not to sit up any longer; and once every
-night arise, and see that the Children be covered, for
-taking of Colde.”<a id='r556' /><a href='#f556' class='c021'><sup>[556]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Some idea of the class of women who actually
-undertook the important duties of Matron for the
-London Hospitals may be gathered from a petition
-presented by Joane Darvole, Matron of St. Thomas’s
-Hospital, Southwark, to Laud. She alleged “that
-she was dragged out of the Chapel of the Hospital
-at service and dragged along the streets to prison for
-debt, to the hazard of her life,” she being a “very weak
-sickly and aged woman,” clothes torn from her back
-and cast into a swoon. She petitions against the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_248'>248</span>profanation of God’s house and the scandal to the
-congregation.<a id='r557' /><a href='#f557' class='c021'><sup>[557]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Sick and wounded soldiers were tended at the
-Savoy, where there were thirteen Sisters, whose
-joint salaries amounted to £52 16<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i> per annum.<a id='r558' /><a href='#f558' class='c021'><sup>[558]</sup></a>
-Among the orders for the patients, nurses and widows
-in the Savoy and other hospitals in and about London
-occur the following regulations:—4ᵗʰˡʸ “That every
-soldier or nurse ... that shall profanely
-sweare” to pay 12<i>d.</i> for the first offence, 12<i>d.</i> for the
-second, and be expelled for the third. 8ᵗʰˡʸ “That
-if any souldier shall marye any of the nurses of the
-said houses whilst hee is there for care or (recov)ery
-they both shall be turned forth of the House. 11ᵗʰˡʸ
-No soldier under cure to have their (wiv)es lodge
-with them there except by the approbation of the
-Phisicion. 12ᵗʰˡʸ No nurse to be dismissed without
-the approval of 2 of the Treasurers for the relief of
-maimed soldiers at least. Nurses to be chosen from
-among the widows of soldiers if there are among
-them those that be fit, and those to have 5<i>s.</i> per
-weeke as others usually have had for the service.
-14ᵗʰˡʸ soldiers, wounded and sick, outside the hospitals
-not to have more than 4<i>s.</i> per week. Those in St.
-Thomas’s and Bartholomew’s hospital 2<i>s.</i> a week,
-those in their parents’, masters’ or friends’ houses,
-according to their necessities, but not more than
-4<i>s.</i> per week. 15ᵗʰˡʸ Soldiers’ widows to receive
-according to their necessities, but not more than
-4<i>s.</i> a week. 19ᵗʰˡʸ If any of the nurses ...
-shalbee negligent in their duties or in giving due
-attendance to the ... sicke souldiers by daye
-or night or shall by scoulding, brawlinge or chidinge
-make any disturbance in the said hospitall, she shall
-forfeite 12<i>d.</i> for 1st offence, week’s pay for second,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_249'>249</span>be dismissed for the third. 20ᵗʰˡʸ If any widow
-after marriage shall come and receive weekly pensions
-as a soldier’s widow contrary to the ordinance of
-parlᵗ he which hath married her to repay it, &amp; if he
-is unable she shall be complained of to the nearest
-J.P. and be punished as a de(ceiver).”<a id='r559' /><a href='#f559' class='c021'><sup>[559]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>There was one nurse for every ten patients in the
-Dublin hospitals, and the salary was £10 per annum,
-out of which she had to find her board.<a id='r560' /><a href='#f560' class='c021'><sup>[560]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The opportunity which the hospitals afforded for
-training in the art of nursing was entirely wasted.
-The idea that the personal tending of the sick and
-forlorn poor would be a religious service of special
-value in the sight of God had vanished, and their
-care, no longer transformed by the devotion of religious
-enthusiasm, appeared a sordid duty, only fit for
-the lowest class in the community. Well-to-do men
-relieved their consciences by bequeathing money for
-the endowment of hospitals, but the sense of social
-responsibility was not fostered in girls, and the expression
-of charitable instincts was almost confined
-in the case of women to their personal relations.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Outside the hospitals employment was given to a
-considerable number of women in the tending of
-persons stricken with small-pox or the plague, and
-in searching corpses for signs of the plague. London
-constables and churchwardens were ordered in 1570
-“to provide to have in readiness Women to be Provyders
-&amp; Deliverers of necessaries to infected Howses,
-and to attend the infected Persons, and they to bear
-reed Wandes, so that the sick maie be kept from the
-whole, as nere as maie be, needful attendance weyed.”<a id='r561' /><a href='#f561' class='c021'><sup>[561]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>In the town records of Reading it is noted “at
-this daye Marye Jerome Wydowe was sworn to be
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_250'>250</span>a viewer and searcher of all the bodyes that shall
-dye within this boroughe, and truly to report and
-certifye to her knowledge of what disease they dyed,
-etc.; and Anne Lovejoy widowe, jurata, 4ˢ a weeke
-a peice, allowing iiijs. a moneth after.”<a id='r562' /><a href='#f562' class='c021'><sup>[562]</sup></a> “Mary
-Holte was sworne to be a searcher of the dead bodyes
-hencefovrth dyeinge within the boroughe (being
-thereunto required) having iiijs. a weeke for her
-wages, and iii<i>d.</i> a corps carryeing to buryall, and iiijs.
-a weeke a moneth after the ceassinge of the plague.”<a id='r563' /><a href='#f563' class='c021'><sup>[563]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>In 1637 it was “agreed ... with old
-Frewyn and his wief, that she shall presentlye goe
-into the house of Henry Merrifeild and be aidinge
-&amp; helpinge to the said Merrifeild and his wief, during
-the time of their visitacion [plague].... She
-shall have dyett with them, and six weekes after their
-visitacion ended. And old Frewin to have 2<i>s.</i> a week
-duringe all that tyme paid him, and 2<i>s.</i> in hand.
-And she shall have 2ˢ a weeke kept for her &amp; paid
-her in th’end of the sixe weekes after.”<a id='r564' /><a href='#f564' class='c021'><sup>[564]</sup></a> Later “it
-was thought fitt the Woman keeper and Merifielde’s
-wenche in the Pest-house, it beinge above vj weekes
-past since any one dyed there, should be at libertie
-and goe hence to her husbande’s house, she havinge
-done her best endevour to ayre and cleanse all the
-beddes &amp; beddinge &amp; other things in both the houses ...
-for her mayntenance vj weekes after the
-ceassinge of the sicknes, she keepinge the wenche
-with her, they shalbe paid 3<i>s.</i> a weeke for and towardes
-their mayntenance duringe the vj weekes.”<a id='r565' /><a href='#f565' class='c021'><sup>[565]</sup></a> In
-1639 the Council “Agree to geve the Widowe Lovejoye
-in full satisfaccion for all her paynes taken in and
-about the visited people in this Towne in this last
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_251'>251</span>visitacion xls. in money, and cloth to make her a
-kirtle and a wascote, and their favour towards her
-two sonnes-in-lawe (beinge forreynours) about their
-fredome.”<a id='r566' /><a href='#f566' class='c021'><sup>[566]</sup></a> On a petition in 1641 from Widow
-Lovejoy “for better allowance &amp; satisfaction for her
-paines aboute the visited people; ... it was
-agreed that she shall have xxxs. soe soone as the taxe
-for the visited people is made uppe.”<a id='r567' /><a href='#f567' class='c021'><sup>[567]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>In rural districts where hospitals were seldom within
-reach, entries are not infrequently found in the parish
-account books of payments made to women for
-nursing the poor. “Item. To Mother Middleton
-for twoe nights watchinge with Widow Coxe’s child
-being sick.”<a id='r568' /><a href='#f568' class='c021'><sup>[568]</sup></a> “To Goody Halliday, for nursing
-him &amp; his family 5 weeks £1 5; to Goody Nye,
-for assisting in nursing, 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i><a id='r569' /><a href='#f569' class='c021'><sup>[569]</sup></a> ... to Goody
-Peckham for nursing a beggar, 5<i>s.</i> For nursing
-Wickham’s boy with the small pocks 12<i>s.</i>”<a id='r570' /><a href='#f570' class='c021'><sup>[570]</sup></a> A
-Hertfordshire parish paid a woman 15<i>s.</i> for her
-attendance during three weeks on a woman and her
-illegitimate child.<a id='r571' /><a href='#f571' class='c021'><sup>[571]</sup></a> A Morton man was ordered to
-pay out of his next half-year’s rent for the grounds
-he farmed of Isabelle Squire “20<i>s.</i> to Margt. Squire,
-who attended and looked to her half a year during
-the time of her distraction.”<a id='r572' /><a href='#f572' class='c021'><sup>[572]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Sometimes nurses were provided for the poor by religious and
-charitable ladies, who, like Letice, Viscountess Falkland, “hired
-nurses to serve them.”<a id='r573' /><a href='#f573' class='c021'><sup>[573]</sup></a> Sick nurses were also engaged by well-to-do
-people to attend upon themselves or their servants. Thus the Rev.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_252'>252</span>Giles Moore enters in his journal “My mayde being
-sicke I payd for opening her veine 4<i>d.</i> to the Widdow
-Rugglesford, for looking to her, I gave 1<i>s.</i> and to old
-Bess for tending her 3 days and 2 nights I gave 1ˢ; in
-all 2ˢ 4ᵈ.”<a id='r574' /><a href='#f574' class='c021'><sup>[574]</sup></a> A little later, when the writer himself
-was “in an ague. Paid Goodwyfe Ward for being
-necessary to me 1<i>s.</i>”<a id='r575' /><a href='#f575' class='c021'><sup>[575]</sup></a> Though his daughter was
-with him, a nurse watched in the chamber when
-Colonel Hutchinson died in the prison at Dover.<a id='r576' /><a href='#f576' class='c021'><sup>[576]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>A few extracts from account books will supply
-further details as to the usual scale of remuneration
-for nurses; no doubt in each case the money given
-was in addition to meat and drink. Sarah Fell enters
-“by mᵒ given Ann Daniell for her paines about
-Rachell Yeamans when she died 05.00.”<a id='r577' /><a href='#f577' class='c021'><sup>[577]</sup></a> Timothy
-Burrell “pd. Gosmark for tending Mary 3 weeks
-6<i>s.</i>”<a id='r578' /><a href='#f578' class='c021'><sup>[578]</sup></a> Lady Grisell Baillie engaged a special nurse
-for her daughter Rachy at a fee of 5<i>s.</i><a id='r579' /><a href='#f579' class='c021'><sup>[579]</sup></a> At Herstmonceux
-Castle they “pd Hawkin’s wife for tending
-the sick maiden 10 days 3<i>s.</i> Pd. Widdow Weeks
-for tending sick seruants a fortnight 4<i>s.</i>”<a id='r580' /><a href='#f580' class='c021'><sup>[580]</sup></a> Sir John
-Foulis in Scotland paid “to Ketherin in pᵗ paymᵗ
-&amp; till account for her attendance on me the time of
-my sickness 12. 0. 0” [scots].<a id='r581' /><a href='#f581' class='c021'><sup>[581]</sup></a> “To Katherine tueddie
-in compleat paymᵗ for her attendance on me wⁿ I
-was sick 20. 0. 0.” [scots].<a id='r582' /><a href='#f582' class='c021'><sup>[582]</sup></a> “To my good douchter
-jennie to give tibbie tomsone for her attendance
-on my wife the time of her sickness 5. 16. 0. [scots].”<a id='r583' /><a href='#f583' class='c021'><sup>[583]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_253'>253</span>All the above instances refer to professional nursing;
-that is to say to the tending of the sick for wages, but
-nursing was more often of an unprofessional character.
-Sickness was rife in all classes, and for the most part
-the sick were tended by the women of their household
-or family. The claim for such assistance was felt
-beyond the limits of kinship, and in the village community
-each woman would render it to her neighbour
-without thought of reward. The solidarity of the
-community was a vital tradition to the village matron
-of the early seventeenth century, and it was only
-in cases of exceptional isolation or difficulty, or where
-the sick person was a stranger or an outcast that the
-services of a paid nurse were called in. Probably
-the standard of efficiency was higher in domestic
-than in professional nursing, because professional
-nurses received no systematic training. Their rate
-of remuneration was low, the essential painfulness of
-their calling was not concealed by the glamour of
-a religious vocation, still less was it rewarded by any
-social distinction. Therefore the women who took
-up nursing for their livelihood did so from necessity,
-and were drawn from the lower classes.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Illness was so frequent in the seventeenth century
-that few girls can have reached maturity without the
-opportunity of practising the art of nursing at home;
-but amongst the “common people,” that is to say
-all the class of independent farmers and tradesmen,
-the housewife can hardly have found time to perfect
-her skill in nursing to a fine art. Probably the highest
-level was reached in the households of the gentry,
-where idleness was not yet the accepted hall-mark of
-a lady, and the mistress felt herself to be responsible
-for the training of her children and servants in
-every branch of the domestic arts, amongst which
-were reckoned both medicine and nursing.</p>
-<h3 class='c032'>B. <i>Surgery and Medicine.</i></h3>
-
-<p class='c029'>The position held by mediæval women in the arts
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_254'>254</span>of healing is shown in such books as Mallory’s “Morte
-d’Arthur.” When wounds proved intractable to
-the treatment of the rough and ready surgeons who
-attended in the vicinity of tourneys, knights sought
-help from some high-born lady renowned for her
-skill in medicine. It is true that popular belief
-assigned her success to witchcraft rather than to the
-knowledge and understanding acquired by diligent
-study and experience, but a tendency to faith in the
-occult was universal, and the reputation of the ladies
-probably bore some relation to their success in the
-cures attempted, for, according to the author of
-“The Golden Bough,” science is the lineal descendant
-of witchcraft. The position of pre-eminence as consultants
-was no longer retained by women in the seventeenth
-century. Schools and Universities had been
-founded, where men could study medicine and
-anatomy, and thus secure for themselves a higher
-standard of knowledge and efficiency; but, though
-women were excluded from these privileges they were
-not yet completely ousted from the medical profession,
-and as a domestic art medicine was still extensively
-practised by them.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Every housewife was expected to understand the
-treatment of the minor ailments at least of her household,
-and to prepare her own drugs. Commonplace
-books of this period contain recipes for making mulberry
-syrup, preserving fruit and preparing meats, mingled
-with, for example, prescriptions for plague water,
-which is “very good against the plague, the
-small-pox, the measles, surfeitts ... and is
-of a sovereign nature to be given in any sickness.”
-“An oyle good for any ach—and ointments for
-sore eyes or breasts, or stone in the kidney or bladder.”
-And in addition, “my brother Jones his way of making
-inks.”<a id='r584' /><a href='#f584' class='c021'><sup>[584]</sup></a> “The Ladies Dispensatory” contains “the
-Natures, Vertues and Qualities of all Herbs, and Simples
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_255'>255</span>usefull in Physick. Reduced into a Methodical Order,”
-the diseases to be treated including those of men,
-as well as women and children.<a id='r585' /><a href='#f585' class='c021'><sup>[585]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>As was the case in other domestic arts, girls depended for
-their training in medicine chiefly on the tradition they
-received from their mothers, but this was reinforced
-from other sources as occasion offered. “The Ladies
-Dispensatory” was not the only handbook published
-for their use; sometimes, though schools were closed
-to women, an opportunity occurred for private coaching.
-Thus Sarah Fell entered in her account book,
-“July ʸᵉ 5º 1674 by mᵒ to Bro: Loweʳ yᵗ hee gave
-Thomas Lawson foʳ comeinge over hitheʳ to Instruct
-him &amp; sistʳˢ, in the knowledge of herbs. 10.00,”<a id='r586' /><a href='#f586' class='c021'><sup>[586]</sup></a>
-and when Mrs. Hutchinson’s husband was Governor
-of the Tower she allowed Sir Walter Raleigh and Mr.
-Ruthin during their imprisonment to make experiments
-in chemistry “at her cost, partly to comfort and divert
-the poor prisoners, and partly to gain the knowledge
-of their experiments, and the medicines to help such
-poor people as were not able to seek physicians.
-By these means she acquired a great deal of skill,
-which was very profitable to many all her life.”<a id='r587' /><a href='#f587' class='c021'><sup>[587]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Neither did ladies confine their services to their
-own household, but extended their benefits to all
-their suffering neighbours. The care of the sick poor
-was considered to be one of the duties of a “Person of
-Quality,” whose housekeepers were expected “to have
-a competent knowledge in Physick and Chyrurgery,
-that they may be able to help their maimed, sick and
-indigent Neighbours; for Commonly, all good and
-charitable Ladies make this a part of their Housekeepers
-business.”<a id='r588' /><a href='#f588' class='c021'><sup>[588]</sup></a> The “Good Woman” is described
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_256'>256</span>as one who “distributes among the Indigent,
-Money and Books, and Cloaths, and Physick, as
-their severall Circumstances may require,” to
-relieve “her poorer Neighbours in sudden Distress,
-when a Doctor is not at Hand, or when they have
-no Money to buy what may be necessary for them;
-and the charitableness of her Physick is often attended
-by some cure or other that is remarkable. God gives
-a <i>peculiar Blessing</i> to the Practice of those Women
-who have no other design in this Matter, but the
-doing Good: that neither prescribe where they
-may have the Advice of the Learned, nor at any time
-give or recommend any thing to try Experiments,
-but what they are assured from former Tryals is safe
-and innocent; and if it do not help cannot hurt.”<a id='r589' /><a href='#f589' class='c021'><sup>[589]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The provision made by Lady Falkland of “antidotes
-against infection and of Cordials, and other several
-sorts of Physick for such of her Neighbours as should
-need them, amounted yearly to very considerable
-summes ... her skil indeed was more than
-ordinary, and her wariness too.... Bookes
-of spiritual exhortations, she carried in her hand to
-these sick persons.”<a id='r590' /><a href='#f590' class='c021'><sup>[590]</sup></a> Mrs. Elizabeth Bedell “was
-very famous and expert in Chirurgery, which she
-continually practised upon multitudes that flock’d
-to her, and still <i>gratis</i>, without respect of persons,
-poor or rich. It hapned occasionally that some
-would return like the heald Samaritan, with some
-token of thankfulness; though this was seldom.
-But God did not fail to reward them with (that
-which in Scripture is most properly call’d his reward)
-children, and the fruit of the womb. 3 sons and 4
-daughters.”<a id='r591' /><a href='#f591' class='c021'><sup>[591]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Expressions of gratitude to women for these medical
-services occur in letters and diaries of the time. The
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_257'>257</span>Rev. R. Josselin enters January 27th, 1672, “My
-L. Honeywood sent her coach for me: yᵗ I stayd
-to March 10, in wᶜʰ time my Lady was my nurse &amp;
-Phisitian &amp; I hope for much good: ... they
-considered yᵉ scurvy. I tooke purge &amp; other things
-for it;”<a id='r592' /><a href='#f592' class='c021'><sup>[592]</sup></a> Marmaduke Rawdon met with a carriage
-accident, in which he strained his “arme, but comminge
-to Hodsden his good cossen Mrs. Williams, with hir
-arte and care, quickly cured itt, and in ten dayes
-was well againe.”<a id='r593' /><a href='#f593' class='c021'><sup>[593]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Nor was the practice of medicine confined to Gentlewomen;
-many a humble woman in the country,
-the wife of farmer or husbandman, used her skill for
-the benefit of her neighbours. In their case, though
-many were prompted purely by motives of kindness
-and goodwill, others received payment for their
-services. How much the dependence of the common
-people on the skill of these “wise women” was taken
-for granted is suggested by some lines in “The
-Alchemist,” where Mammon assures Dol Common</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c030'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“This nook, here, of the Friers is no Climate</div>
- <div class='line in1'>For her to live obscurely in, to learne</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Physick, and Surgery, for the Constable’s wife</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Of some odde Hundred in Essex.”<a id='r594' /><a href='#f594' class='c021'><sup>[594]</sup></a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c029'>Though their work was entirely unscientific, experience
-and common sense, or perhaps mere luck,
-often gave to their treatment an appearance of success
-which was denied to their more learned rivals. Thus
-Adam Martindale describing his illness says that
-it was “a vehement fermentation in my body ...
-ugly dry scurfe, eating deep and spreading
-broad. Some skilfull men, or so esteemed, being
-consulted and differing much in their opinions, we were
-left to these three bad choices ... in this greate
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_258'>258</span>straite God sent us in much mercie a poore woman,
-who by a salve made of nothing but Celandine and
-a little of the Mosse of an ashe root, shred and boyled
-in May-butter, tooke it cleare away in a short time,
-and though after a space there was some new breakings
-out, yet these being annointed with the same salve
-... were absolutely cleared away.”<a id='r595' /><a href='#f595' class='c021'><sup>[595]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The general standard of efficiency among the
-men who professed medicine and surgery was very
-low, the chief work of the ordinary country practitioner
-being the letting of blood, and the wise woman
-of the village may easily have been his superior in
-other forms of treatment. Sir Ralph Verney, writing
-to his wife advises her to “give the child no phisick but
-such as midwives and old women, with the doctors
-approbation, doe prescribe; for assure yourselfe
-they by experience know better than any phisition
-how to treate such infants.”<a id='r596' /><a href='#f596' class='c021'><sup>[596]</sup></a> Of Hobbes it was said
-that he took little physick and preferred “an experienced
-old woman” to the “most learned and
-inexperienced physician.”<a id='r597' /><a href='#f597' class='c021'><sup>[597]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Dr. Turbeville, a noted oculist in the West
-Country, was sent for to cure the Princess of
-Denmark, who had a dangerous inflammation
-of the eyes. On his return he is reported to have
-said that “he expected to learn something of these
-Court doctors, but, to his amazement he found them
-only spies upon his practice, and wholly ignorant
-as to the lady’s case; nay, farther, he knew several
-midwives and old women, whose advice he would
-rather follow than theirs.”<a id='r598' /><a href='#f598' class='c021'><sup>[598]</sup></a> He died at Sarum
-in 1696, and his sister, Mrs. Mary Turbeville,
-practised afterwards in London “with good
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_259'>259</span>reputation and success. She has all her brother’s
-receipts, and having seen his practice, during many
-years, knows how to use them. For my part, I have
-so good an opinion of her skill that should I again be
-afflicted with sore eyes, which God forbid! I would
-rely upon her advice rather than upon any pretenders
-or professors in London or elsewhere.”<a id='r599' /><a href='#f599' class='c021'><sup>[599]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Events, however, were taking place which would soon
-curtail the practice of women whose training was confined
-to personal experience, tradition and casual
-study. The established associations of physicians,
-surgeons and apothecaries, although of recent growth,
-demanded and obtained, like other companies, exclusive
-privileges. Their policy fell in with the
-Government’s desire to control the practice of medicine,
-in order to check witchcraft. Statute 3, Henry VIII.,
-enacted that “none should exercise the Faculty of
-Physick or Surgery within the City of <i>London</i> or within
-Seven Miles of the same, unless first he were examined,
-approved and admitted by the Bishop of <i>London</i>,
-or the Dean of <i>St. Paul’s</i>, calling to him or them
-Four Doctors of Physick, and for Surgery other
-expert Persons in that Faculty, upon pain of Forfeiture
-of £5 for every Month they should occupy
-Physick or Surgery, not thus admitted” because
-“that common Artificers, as Smiths, Weavers,
-and Women, boldly and accustomably took upon them
-great Cures, and Things of great Difficulty, in the
-which they partly used Sorceries and Witchcraft,
-and partly applied such Medicines unto the Diseased,
-as were very noyous, and nothing meet therefore.”<a id='r600' /><a href='#f600' class='c021'><sup>[600]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The restrictions were extended to the provinces.
-A Charter given to the Company of Barber-Surgeons
-at Salisbury in 1614 declared that “No surgeon or
-barber is to practise any surgery or barbery, unless
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_260'>260</span>first made a free citizen, and then a free brother of
-the company. Whereas, also, there are divers women
-and others within this city, altogether unskilled in
-the art of chirurgery, who do oftentimes take cures
-on them, to the great danger of the patient, it is
-therefore ordered, that no such woman, or any other,
-shall take or meddle with any cure of chirurgery,
-wherefore they, or any of them shall have or take
-any money, benefit or other reward for the same,
-upon pain that every delinquent shall for every cure
-to be taken in hand, or meddled with, contrary to
-this order, unless she or they shall be first allowed by
-this Company, forfeit and lose to the use of this
-Company the sum of ten shillings.”<a id='r601' /><a href='#f601' class='c021'><sup>[601]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The Apothecaries were separated from the Grocers
-in 1617, the charter of their company providing that
-“No person or persons whatsoever may have, hold,
-or keep an Apothecaries Shop or Warehouse, or that
-may exercise or use the Art or Mystery of Apothecaries,
-or make, mingle, work, compound, prepare,
-give, apply, or administer, any Medicines, or that may
-sell, set on sale, utter, set forth, or lend any Compound
-or Composition to any person or persons whatsoever
-within the City of London, and the Liberties thereof,
-or within Seven Miles of the said city, unless such
-person or persons as have been brought up, instructed,
-and taught by the space of Seven Years at the least,
-as Apprentice or Apprentices, with some Apothecary
-or Apothecaries exercising the same Art, and being a
-Freeman of the said Mystery.” Any persons wishing
-to become an Apothecary must be examined and
-approved after his apprenticeship.<a id='r602' /><a href='#f602' class='c021'><sup>[602]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>It will be observed that there is little in their
-charters to distinguish the medical from other
-city Companies, and while the examination required
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_261'>261</span>by the Faculties of Medicine and Surgery in the City
-of London excluded women altogether, the Apothecaries
-still admitted them by marriage or apprenticeship.
-“Mʳⁱˢ Lammeere Godfrey Villebranke her son
-both Dutch Pothecarys” are included in a certificate
-made by the Justices of the Peace to the Privy
-Council, of the foreigners residing in the Liberty of
-Westminster.<a id='r603' /><a href='#f603' class='c021'><sup>[603]</sup></a> A journeyman who applied for the
-freedom of the company, stated that he was serving
-the widow of an apothecary. His application was
-refused time after time through difficulties owing to
-a clause in the Charter. Counsel’s opinion was
-taken, and finally he was admitted provided he kept
-a journeyman and entered into a bond of £100 to
-perform the same, that he gave £10 and a spoon to
-the Company, took the oaths and paid Counsel’s
-fees.<a id='r604' /><a href='#f604' class='c021'><sup>[604]</sup></a> He subsequently married the widow. Similar
-rules obtained in the provinces, as is shown by the
-admittance of Thomas Serne in 1698-9 to the freedom
-of the City of Dorchester on payment of 40<i>s.</i> because
-he had “married a wife who had lived as apprentice
-for 20 years to an apothecary.”<a id='r605' /><a href='#f605' class='c021'><sup>[605]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The jurisdiction of companies was local, and where
-no company existed boys were apprenticed to surgery
-for the sake of training, though such an apprenticeship
-conferred no monopoly privilege. Surgery
-was sometimes combined with another trade. John
-Croker describes in his memoir how he was bound
-apprentice in 1686 to one John Shilson “by trade
-a serge-maker, but who also professed surgery; with
-whom I went to be instructed in the art of surgery.”<a id='r606' /><a href='#f606' class='c021'><sup>[606]</sup></a>
-The operation of these various Statutes and Charters
-being local and their enforcement depending upon
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_262'>262</span>the energy of the parties interested, it is difficult to
-determine what was their actual and immediate effect
-on the medical practice of women. Statute 3, Henry
-VIII., must have been enforced with some severity,
-for a later one declares “Sithence the making of which
-said Act the companie &amp; felowship of surgeons of
-London, minding oonly their own lucres, and nothing
-the profit or ease of the diseased or patient, have sued,
-troubled and vexed divers honest persons as well men
-as women, whom God hath endued with the knowledge
-of the nature, kind, and operation of certain herbes,
-roots and waters, and the using &amp; ministering of
-them to such as been pained with customable diseases,
-as women’s breasts being sore, a pin and the web in the
-eye, &amp;c., &amp;c., and yet the said persons have not taken
-any thing for their pains or cunning.”<a id='r607' /><a href='#f607' class='c021'><sup>[607]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Not only the Surgeons but the Apothecaries also,
-enforced observance of the privileges which the King
-had granted to them, and in consequence a Petition
-of many thousands of citizens and inhabitants in and
-about London was presented on behalf of Mr. William
-Trigg, Practitioner of Physick, saying that he “did
-abundance of good to all sorts of people in and about
-this City: when most of the Colledge Doctors
-deserted us, since which time your Petitioners have
-for above twenty yeares, in their severall times of
-Sicknesses, and infirmities taken Physick from him
-... in which time, we doe verily believe in
-our consciences, that he hath done good to above
-thirty thousand Persons; and that he maketh all
-his Compositions himselfe, not taking anything
-for his Physick from poor people; but rather
-releiving their necessities, nor any money from any
-of us for his advice; and but moderately for his
-Physick: his custome being to take from the middle
-sort of Patients 12<i>d.</i>, 18<i>d.</i>, 2<i>s.</i>, 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> as they please
-to give, very seldom five shillings unlesse from such as take
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_263'>263</span>much Physick with them together into the Countrey ...
-there is a good and wholesome law made
-in the 34th year of King Henry 8 C. 8. Permitting
-every man that hath knowledge and experience in
-the nature of Herbs, Roots and waters, to improve
-his Talent for the common good and health of the
-people,” and concluding that unless Dr. Trigg is
-allowed to continue his practice “many poore
-people must of necessity perish to death ...
-for they are not able to pay great fees to Doctors
-and Apothecaries bills which cost more then his
-advice and Physick; nor can we have accesse unto
-them when we desire, which we familiarly have to
-Dr. <i>Trigg</i> to our great ease and comfort.”<a id='r608' /><a href='#f608' class='c021'><sup>[608]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Prudence Ludford, wife of William Ludford of
-Little Barkhampton, was presented in 1683 “for
-practising the profession of a chyrurgeon contrary
-to law,”<a id='r609' /><a href='#f609' class='c021'><sup>[609]</sup></a> but many women at this time continued
-their practice as doctors undisturbed; for example,
-Mrs. Lucy Hutchinson casually mentions that one
-of her maids went to Colson, to have a sore eye cured
-by a woman of the town.<a id='r610' /><a href='#f610' class='c021'><sup>[610]</sup></a> While Mrs. D’ewes was
-travelling from Axminster to London by coach, her
-baby boy cried so violently all the way, on account
-of the roughness of the road that he ruptured himself,
-and was left behind at Dorchester under the care
-of Mrs. Margaret Waltham, “a female practitioner.”<a id='r611' /><a href='#f611' class='c021'><sup>[611]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-<p class='c013'>The account books of Boroughs and Parishes show
-that the poor received medical treatment from men
-and women indiscriminately. A whole series of such
-payments occur in the minute book of the Dorchester
-Corporation. “It is ordered that the Vˡⁱ to
-be paid to Peter Salanova for cutting of Giles
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_264'>264</span>Garrett’s leg shall be paid out of the Xˡⁱ yearly paiable
-out of the Hospitall for pious vses ... to
-have the one halfe having cutt of his leg already,
-and the other halfe when he is thoroughly cured.<a id='r612' /><a href='#f612' class='c021'><sup>[612]</sup></a>
-... Unto the Widdow Foote xs. for the
-curing of the Widow Huchins’ lame leg at present;
-and xs. more when the cure is finished<a id='r613' /><a href='#f613' class='c021'><sup>[613]</sup></a>.... Mr.
-Losse should be payed by the Steward of the Hospital
-the somme of viij li for his paynes and fee as Phisitian
-in taking care of the poore of the Towne for the
-last yeare ... as it hath bin formerly accustomed....
-Vnto Mr. Mullens the somme
-of thirty shillings for curing Hugh Rogers of a
-dangerous fistula.”<a id='r614' /><a href='#f614' class='c021'><sup>[614]</sup></a> Three pounds more (three having
-already been paid) was ordered to be given to
-“Cassander Haggard for finishing the great cure on
-John Drayton otherwise Keuse.”<a id='r615' /><a href='#f615' class='c021'><sup>[615]</sup></a> In another case
-the Council tendered to Mr. Mullens, “the chirurgeon,
-the some of xxxˢ for curing of Thomas Hobbs, but he
-answered hee would consider of it next weeke [He
-declined].”<a id='r616' /><a href='#f616' class='c021'><sup>[616]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>At Cowden the overseers paid to Dr. Willett
-for “reducing the arm of Elizᵗʰ Skinner, and for
-ointment, cerecloths and journeys, £2;” three years
-later a further sum of 10<i>s.</i> was given “to Goodwife
-Wells for curing Eliz Skinner’s hand.”<a id='r617' /><a href='#f617' class='c021'><sup>[617]</sup></a> Mary
-Olyve was paid 6<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i> “for curing a boye that was
-lame” at Mayfield,<a id='r618' /><a href='#f618' class='c021'><sup>[618]</sup></a> and 15<i>s.</i> was given to “Widow
-Thurston for healing of Stannard’s son,” by the
-churchwardens at Cratfield.<a id='r619' /><a href='#f619' class='c021'><sup>[619]</sup></a> In Somerset £5 was
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_265'>265</span>paid to “Johane Shorley towards the cure of Thomas
-Dudderidge. Further satisfaction when cure is don.”<a id='r620' /><a href='#f620' class='c021'><sup>[620]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Such entries show that though women may have
-practised surgery and medicine chiefly as domestic arts,
-nevertheless their skill was also used professionally, their
-natural aptitude in this direction enabling them to maintain
-their position throughout the seventeenth century
-even when deprived of all opportunities for systematic
-study and scientific experiments, and in spite of the
-determined attacks by the Corporations of physicians
-and surgeons; but their success was owing to the fact
-that Science had as yet achieved small results in the
-standard of medical efficiency.</p>
-<h3 class='c032'>C. <i>Midwifery.</i></h3>
-
-<p class='c029'>It has been shown that the employment of women
-in the arts of medicine, nursing and teaching was
-chiefly, though not entirely, confined to the domestic
-sphere; midwifery, on the other hand, though
-occasionally practised by amateurs, was, in the majority
-of cases, carried on by women who, whether skilled
-or unskilled, regarded it as the chief business of their
-lives, and depended upon it for their maintenance.
-Not only did midwifery exist on a professional
-basis from immemorial days, but it was formerly
-regarded as a mystery inviolably reserved for women;
-and though by the seventeenth century the barrier
-which excluded men had broken down, the extent
-to which the profession had in the past been a woman’s
-monopoly is shown by the fact that the men who
-now began to practise the art were known as men-midwives.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The midwife held a recognised position in Society
-and was sometimes well-educated and well-paid.
-Nothing is known as to the mediæval history of midwifery
-in England; and possibly nothing ever will be
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_266'>266</span>known concerning it, for the Englishwoman of that
-period had no impulse to commit her experience
-and ideas to writing. All the wisdom which touched
-her special sphere in life was transmitted orally from
-mother to daughter, and thus at any change, like
-the Industrial Revolution, which silently undermined
-the foundations of society, the traditional womanly
-wisdom could vanish, leaving no trace behind it.
-Even in the Elizabethan period and during the seventeenth
-century, when most women could read and
-many could write, they show little tendency to record
-information concerning their own affairs. But the
-profession of midwifery was then no longer reserved exclusively
-for women. The first treatise on the subject
-published in England was a translation by Raynold
-of “The Byrth of Mankynd.” He says in his preface
-that the book had already been translated into “Dutche,
-Frenche, Spanyshe and dyvers other languages. In
-the which Countries there be fewe women that can
-reade, but they wyll haue one of these bookes alwayes
-in readinesse ... it beinge lykewyse sette foorth
-in our Englyshe speeche ... it may supply
-the roome and place of a good Mydwyfe, ...
-and truly ... there be syth the fyrst
-settynge forth of this booke, right many honourable
-Ladyes, &amp; other Worshypfull Gentlewomen, which
-have not disdayned the oftener by the occasion of
-this booke to frequent and haunt women in theyr
-labours, caryinge with them this booke in theyr
-handes, and causyng such part of it as doth chiefely
-concerne the same pourpose, to be read before the
-mydwyfe, and the rest of the women then beyng
-present; whereby ofttymes, then all haue been
-put in remembraunce of that, wherewith the laboryng
-woman hath bene greatly comforted, and alleuiated
-of her thronges and travayle.... But here
-now let not the good Mydwyves be offended with that,
-that is spoken of the badde. For verily there is no
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_267'>267</span>science, but that it hath his Apes, Owles, Beares and
-Asses ... at the fyrst commyng abroade
-of this present booke, many of this sorte of mydwyves,
-meuyd eyther of envie, or els of mallice, or both,
-diligented ... to fynde the meanes to suppresse
-... the same; makyng all wemen of
-theyr acquayntaunce ... to beleeue, that
-it was nothyng woorth: and that it shoulde be a
-slaunder to women, forso muche as therein was descried
-and set foorth the secretes and priuities of women,
-and that euery boy and knaue hadd of these bookes,
-readyng them as openly as the tales of Robinhood &amp;c.”<a id='r621' /><a href='#f621' class='c021'><sup>[621]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>It is sometimes supposed that childbirth was an
-easier process in former generations than it has become
-since the developments of modern civilisation. The
-question has a direct bearing on the profession of
-midwifery, but it cannot be answered here, nor
-could it receive a simple answer of yes or no, for it
-embraces two problems for the midwife, the ease and
-safety of a normal delivery and her resources in face
-of the abnormal.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>No one can read the domestic records of the seventeenth
-century without realising that the dangers of
-childbed were much greater then than now; nevertheless
-the travail of the average woman at that time may
-have been easier. There was clearly a great difference
-in this respect between the country woman, inured
-to hard muscular labour, and the high-born lady or
-city dame. The difference is pointed out by contemporary
-writers. McMath dedicated “the <i>Expert
-Mid-wife</i>” to the Lady Marquies of Douglas because
-“as it concerns all Bearing Women ... so
-chiefly the more Noble and Honourable, as being more
-Excellent, more Tender, and Delicate, and readily
-more opprest with the symptoms.” Jane Sharp confirms
-this, saying that “the poor Country people,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_268'>268</span>where there are none but women to assist (unless it
-be those that are exceeding poor and in a starving
-condition, and then they have more need of meat
-than Midwives) ... are as fruitful and as
-safe and well delivered, if not much more fruitful,
-and better commonly in Childbed than the greatest
-Ladies of the Land.”<a id='r622' /><a href='#f622' class='c021'><sup>[622]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Rich and poor alike depended upon the midwife to
-bring them safely through the perils of childbirth,
-and it is certain that women of a high level of intelligence
-and possessing considerable skill belonged to the
-profession. The fees charged by successful midwives
-were very high, and during the first half of the century
-they were considered in no way inferior to doctors
-in skill. It was natural that Queen Henrietta Maria
-should send for one of her own country women to
-attend her, French midwives enjoying an extraordinarily
-high reputation for their skill at this time.
-The payment in 1630 of £100 to Frances Monnhadice,
-Nurse to the Queen, “for the diet &amp; entertainment
-of Madame Peron, midwife to the Queen,” and further
-of a “Warrant to pay Madame Peron £300 of the
-King’s gift”<a id='r623' /><a href='#f623' class='c021'><sup>[623]</sup></a> shows the high value attached to her
-services.</p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>That English midwives were often possessed of
-ample means is shown by a deposition made by
-“Abraham Perrot, of Barking parish, Gentleman,”
-who “maketh oath that a month before the fire
-... he ... paid unto Hester Shaw
-Widow, ... the summe of £953.6.8.”<a id='r624' /><a href='#f624' class='c021'><sup>[624]</sup></a> the said
-Mrs. Shaw being described as a midwife; but
-relations who were members of this profession
-are never alluded to in letters, diaries or memoirs.
-From this absence of any social reference it is difficult
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_269'>269</span>to determine from what class of the community
-they were drawn, or what were the circumstances
-which led women to take up this responsible and
-arduous profession. No doubt necessity led many
-ignorant women to drift into the work when they were
-too old to receive new ideas and too wanting in ambition
-to make any serious effort to improve their
-skill, but the writings of Mrs. Cellier and Mrs. Jane
-Sharp prove that there were others who regarded
-their profession with enthusiasm, and who possessed
-an intelligence acute enough to profit by all the
-experience and instruction which was within their
-reach.</p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The only training available for women who wished
-to acquire a sound knowledge of midwifery was by
-apprenticeship; this, if the mistress was skilled in
-her art, was valuable up to a certain point, but as no
-organisation existed among midwives it was not possible
-to insist upon any general standard of efficiency,
-and many midwives were ignorant of the most elementary
-circumstances connected with their profession.
-In any case such an apprenticeship could not supply
-the place of the more speculative side of training,
-which can only be given in connection with schools
-of anatomy where research work is possible, and from
-these all women were excluded.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>As has been said, many women who entered the
-profession did not even go through a form of apprenticeship,
-but acquired their experience solely, to
-use Raynold’s words, “by haunting women in their
-labours.” In rural England it was customary when
-travail began, to send for all the neighbours who were
-responsible women, partly with the object of securing
-enough witnesses to the child’s birth, partly because
-it was important to spread the understanding of
-midwifery as widely as possible, because any woman
-might be called upon to render assistance in an
-emergency.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_270'>270</span>Several handbooks on Midwifery were written in
-response to the demand for opportunities for scientific
-training by the more intelligent members of the profession.
-One of the most popular of these books,
-which passed through many editions, was published
-in 1671 by Jane Sharp “Practitioner in the art of
-Midwifery above 30 years.” The preface to the fourth
-edition says that “the constant and unwearied
-Industry of this ingenious and well-skill’d midwife,
-Mrs. Jane Sharp, together with her great Experience
-of Anatomy &amp; Physick, by the many years of her
-Practice in the art of Midwifery hath ...
-made them ... much desired by all that
-either knew her Person ... or ever read this
-book, which of late, by its Scarceness hath been so
-much enquired after ... as to have many
-after impressions.” The author says that she has
-“often sate down sad in the Consideration of the
-many Miseries Women endure in the Hands of unskilful
-Midwives; many professing the Art (without
-any skill in anatomy, which is the Principal part
-effectually necessary for a Midwife) meerly for Lucres
-sake. I have been at Great Cost in Translations
-for all Books, either French, Dutch or Italian of this
-kind. All which I offer with my own Experience.”<a id='r625' /><a href='#f625' class='c021'><sup>[625]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Jane Sharp points out that midwives must be both
-speculative and practical, for “she that wants the
-knowledge of Speculation, is like one that is blind
-or wants her sight: she that wants the Practice, is
-like one that is lame &amp; wants her legs....
-Some perhaps may think, that then it is not proper
-for women to be of this profession, because they cannot
-attain so rarely to the knowledge of things as men may,
-who are bred up in Universities, Schools of Learning,
-or serve their Apprenticeship for that end and purpose,
-where anatomy Lectures being frequently read the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_271'>271</span>situation of the parts both of men and women ...
-are often made plain to them. But that objection is
-easily answered, by the former example of the Midwives
-amongst the Israelites, for, though we women
-cannot deny that men in some things may come to a
-greater perfection of knowledge than women ordinarily
-can, by reason of the former helps that women
-want; yet the Holy Scriptures hath recorded Midwives
-to the perpetual honour of the female Sex.
-There not being so much as one word concerning men
-midwives mentioned there ... it being the
-natural propriety of women to be much seeing into
-that art; and though nature be not alone sufficient
-to the perfection of it, yet further knowledge may be
-gain’d by a long and diligent practice, and be communicated
-to others of our own sex. I cannot deny
-the honour due to able Physicians and Chyrurgions,
-when occasion is, Yet ... where there is
-no Men of Learning, the women are sufficient to
-perform this duty.... It is not hard words
-that perform the work, as if none understood the Art
-that cannot understand Greek. Words are but
-the shell, that we oftimes break our Teeth with them
-to come at the kernel, I mean our brains to know what
-is the meaning of them; but to have the same in our
-mother tongue would save us a great deal of needless
-labour. It is commendable for men to employ their
-spare time in some things of deeper Speculation than
-is required of the female sex; but the art of Midwifery
-chiefly concerns us.”<a id='r626' /><a href='#f626' class='c021'><sup>[626]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Though the schools of Medicine and Anatomy were
-closed to women, individual doctors were willing to
-teach the more progressive midwives some of the
-science necessary for their art; thus Culpeper
-dedicated his “Directory” to the midwives of England
-in the following words:—“Worthy Matrons, You are of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_272'>272</span>the number of those whom my soul loveth, and of whom
-I make daily mention in my Prayers: ... If you
-please to make experience of my Rules, they are very
-plain, and easie enough; ... If you make
-use of them, you wil find your work easie, you need
-not call for the help of a Man-Midwife, which is a
-disparagement, not only to yourselves, but also to
-your Profession: ... All the Perfections that
-can be in a Woman, ought to be in a Midwife; the
-first step to which is, To know your ignorance in that
-part of Physick which is the Basis of your Act....
-If <i>any want Wisdom, let him ask it of God</i> (not of
-the <i>Colledg of Physitians</i>, for if they do, they may
-hap to go without their Errand, unless they bring
-Money with them).”<a id='r627' /><a href='#f627' class='c021'><sup>[627]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Efforts made by Peter Chamberlain to secure some
-systematic training for midwives drew upon himself
-the abuse, if not persecution, of his jealous contemporaries.
-In justifying the course he had taken he
-pleads “Because I am pretended to be Ignorant or
-Covetous, or both, therefore some ignorant Women,
-whom either extream Povertie hath necessitated, or
-Hard-heartedness presumed, or the Game of Venus intruded
-into the calling of Midwifry (to have the issues
-of Life &amp; Death of two or three at one time in their
-hands, beside the consequence of Health and Strength
-of the Whole Nation) should neither be sufficiently
-instructed in doing Good, nor restrained from doing
-Evil?... The objection infers thus much.
-Because there was never any Order for instructing and
-governing of Midwives, therefore there never must
-be.... It may be when Bishops are restored
-again, their Ordinaries will come in to plead their
-care. Of what? Truly that none shall do good
-without their leave. That none shall have leave,
-but such as will take their Oath and pay Money. That
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_273'>273</span>taking this Oath and paying their Money with the
-testimonie of two or three Gossips, any may have leave
-to be as ignorant, if not as cruel as themselves, ...
-but of Instruction or Order amongst the Midwives,
-not one word.”<a id='r628' /><a href='#f628' class='c021'><sup>[628]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The danger which threatened midwives by the
-exclusion of women from the scientific training
-available for men, did not pass unnoticed by the leading
-members of the Profession. They realised that the
-question at stake did not concern only the honour
-of their Profession, but involved the suffering, and in
-many cases even the death, of vast numbers of women
-and babies who must always depend on the skill of midwives
-and urged that steps should be taken to raise the
-standard of their efficiency. Mrs. Cellier<a id='r629' /><a href='#f629' class='c021'><sup>[629]</sup></a> pointed out
-“That, within the Space of twenty years last past,
-above six thousand women have died in childbed,
-more than thirteen thousand children have been born
-abortive, and above five thousand chrysome infants
-have been buried, within the weekly bills of mortality;
-above two-thirds of which, amounting to sixteen
-thousand souls, have in all probability perished, for
-want of due skill and care, in those women who practise
-the art of midwifery.... To remedy which,
-it is humbly proposed, that your Majesty will be
-graciously pleased to unite the whole number of
-skilful midwives, now practising within the limits
-of the weekly bills of mortality, into a corporation,
-under the government of a certain number of the most
-able and matron-like women among them, subject to
-the visitation of such person or persons, as your Majesty
-shall appoint; and such Rules for their good government,
-instruction, direction, and administration as
-are hereunto annexed.”</p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_275'>275</span>Mrs. Cellier succeeded with her proposal, in so far
-that His Majesty agreed to unite the midwives into
-a Corporation by Royal Charter, but there the matter
-rested.<a id='r630' /><a href='#f630' class='c021'><sup>[630]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>In France women were more fortunate, for a noted
-school of midwifery had already been established
-at the Hotel Dieu in Paris, at which every six weeks
-dissections and anatomies were especially made for the
-apprentices of the institution, both past and present.<a id='r631' /><a href='#f631' class='c021'><sup>[631]</sup></a>
-Before entering on their profession the French midwives
-were required to pass an examination before the
-chirurgeons. Their professional reputation stood so
-high that Pechey alludes to one of them as “that
-most Famous Woman of the World, <i>Madam Louise
-Burgeois</i>, late Midwife to the Queen of <i>France</i>. The
-praises that we read of all those that ever heard of her
-are not so much a flourish as truth; for her reasons are
-solid experiences, and her witnesses have been all
-of the most eminent Persons of <i>France</i>: and not only
-of her, but as we have already exprest, of the most
-excellent known Men and Women of this Art of
-other Countries.”<a id='r632' /><a href='#f632' class='c021'><sup>[632]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>According to Mrs. Cellier, English midwives were
-for a time examined by the College of Surgeons, but
-as their records for the years in question are missing
-there is no means of ascertaining the numbers of those
-who presented themselves for examination. She
-says that Bishops did not “pretend to License Midwives
-till Bp. <i>Bonner’s</i> time, who drew up the
-Form of the first License, which continued in full
-force till 1642, and then the Physicians and Chirurgeons
-contending about it, it was adjudged a Chyrurgical
-operation, and the Midwives were Licensed
-at <i>Chirurgions-Hall, but not till they had passed three</i>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_276'>276</span><i>examinations, before six skilful Midwives, and as
-many Chirurgions expert in the Art of Midwifery</i>.
-Thus it continued until the Act of Uniformity passed,
-which sent the Midwives back to <i>Doctors Commons</i>,
-where they pay their money (<i>take an oath which it
-is impossible for them to keep</i>) and return home as skilful
-as they went thither. I make no reflections on those
-learned Gentlemen, the Licensers, but refer the
-curious for their further satisfaction to the Yearly
-Bills of Mortality, from 42 to 62; Collections of which
-they may find at <i>Clerkshall</i>. Which if they please
-to compare with these of late Years, they will find there
-did not then happen the eight part of the Casualities
-either to Women or Children, as do now.”<a id='r633' /><a href='#f633' class='c021'><sup>[633]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>In granting licences to midwives the Bishops were
-supposed to make some enquiry as to their professional
-attainments. Among the “articles to be enquired
-of” during Diocesan visits was one “whether any man
-or woman within your Parish, hath professed or practised
-Physick or Chyrurgery; by what name or names
-are they called, and whether are they licensed by the
-Bishop of the Diocesse, or his Vicar Generall, and upon
-whom have they practised, and what good or harm
-have they done?”<a id='r634' /><a href='#f634' class='c021'><sup>[634]</sup></a> And again, “whether any in
-your Parish do practise Physicke or chirurgery, or that
-there be any midwife there, or by what authority
-any of them do practise, or exercise that profession.”<a id='r635' /><a href='#f635' class='c021'><sup>[635]</sup></a>
-But the interest of the Bishops was concerned more
-with the orthodoxy of the midwife than with her
-professional skill.</p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>A midwife’s licence was drawn up as follows:
-beginning:—“Thomas Exton, knight, doctor of
-laws, commisary general, lawfully constituted of
-the right worshipful the dean &amp; chapter of St.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_277'>277</span>Paul’s in London; to our beloved in Christ, Anne
-Voule, the wife of Jacob Voule, of the parish of St
-Gile’s Cripplegat, sendeth greeting in our Lord God
-everlasting: Whereas, by due examination of diverse,
-honest, and discreet women, we have found you apt
-and able, cunning and experte, to occupy &amp; exercise
-the office, business &amp; occupation of midwife,” and
-continuing after many wise and humane rules for her
-guidance with an exhortation “to be diligent, faithful
-and ready to help every woman travelling of child,
-as well the poor as the rich, and you shall not forsake
-the poor woman and leave her to go to the rich;
-you shall in no wise exercise any manner of witchcraft,
-charms, sorcery, invocation, or other prayers, than
-such as may stand with God’s laws, and the king’s,”
-concluding thus:—“Item, you shall not be privy
-to or consent that any priest or other party shall in
-your absence, or your company, or of your knowledge
-or sufferance, baptize any child by any mass, Latin
-service, or prayers than such as are appointed by the
-laws of the Church of England; neither shall you
-consent that any child borne by any woman, who shall
-be delivered by you, shall be carried away without
-being baptized in the parish by the ordinary minister
-where the said child is born.”<a id='r636' /><a href='#f636' class='c021'><sup>[636]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The Bishops’ interest in midwives may have been
-caused partly by a praiseworthy desire to secure an
-adequate supply for the assistance of women in each
-parish. But from the Church’s point of view, the
-midwife’s chief importance was not due to the fact
-that the life of mother and child might depend on
-her skill, but to her capacity for performing the rites
-of baptism. The reasons for granting her this authority
-are explained as follows:—“in hard Labours
-the Head of the Infant was sometimes baptized
-before the whole delivery. This Office of Baptizing
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_278'>278</span>in such Cases of Necessity was commonly performed
-by the Midwife; and ’tis very probable, this gave
-first Occasion to Midwives being licensed by the
-Bishop, because they were to be first examined by the
-Bishop or his delegated Officer, whether they could
-repeat the Form of Baptism, which they were in
-Haste to administer in such extraordinary Occasion.
-But we thank God our times are reformed in Sense,
-and in Religion.”<a id='r637' /><a href='#f637' class='c021'><sup>[637]</sup></a> Though the midwife was only
-expected to baptize in urgent cases she might strain
-her privilege, and baptize even a healthy infant
-into the Roman Church. Her power in this respect
-was regarded with suspicion and jealousy by English
-Protestants, not only because she might inadvertently
-admit the infant to the wrong fold, but because it
-resembled the conferring of office in the Church upon
-women; however, as no man was usually present at
-the birth of a child, and it was fully believed that delay
-might involve the perpetual damnation of the dying
-infant’s soul, no alternative remained. Peter Heylyn,
-in writing of Baptism, comments on the difficulty,
-saying that “the first Reformers did not only allow
-the administration of this Sacrament [Baptism] in
-<i>private</i> houses, but permitted it to private persons,
-even to women also.” He continues that when King
-James, in the Conference at Hampton Court, seemed
-offended because of this liberty to women and
-laicks, Dr. Whitgift, Archbishop of Canterbury, denied
-that the words gave this liberty, and Dr. Babington
-alledged “that the words were purposely made
-ambiguous as otherwise the Book might not have
-passed Parliament.” To whom it was replied by the
-Bishop of London that there was no intent to deceive
-any, but the words did indeed “intend a permission
-of private persons to Baptize in case of <i>necessity</i>.”<a id='r638' /><a href='#f638' class='c021'><sup>[638]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The fear of secret baptisms into the Catholic
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_279'>279</span>Church is shown in a letter which states that “the
-wief of Frances Lovell esqʳ of West Derhᵐ is noted for
-a recusant. And the said Frances had a childe about
-three yeares past christianed by a midwief sent thither
-by the La. Lovell, and the midwief’s name cannot
-be learned.”<a id='r639' /><a href='#f639' class='c021'><sup>[639]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>It was this danger which led to the prosecution of
-women who practised without licences. The Churchwardens
-at Lee presented “the Widow Goney and the
-wife of Thomas Gronge being midwives &amp; not sworne.”
-In Hadingham they report “We have two poore
-women exercising the office of midwives, one Avice
-Rax and the wife of one John Sallerie,”<a id='r640' /><a href='#f640' class='c021'><sup>[640]</sup></a> and elsewhere
-“Dorothye Holding wief of Jo. Holding &amp; Dorothye
-Parkins wief of Wᵐ Parkins” were presented “for
-exercising the office of midwives without License.”<a id='r641' /><a href='#f641' class='c021'><sup>[641]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The fees charged by midwives varied from £300 in
-the case of the French Midwife who attended the
-Queen, to the sum of 1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> paid by the Parish of
-Aspenden to the midwife who delivered a woman
-“received by virtue of a warrant from the justices.”<a id='r642' /><a href='#f642' class='c021'><sup>[642]</sup></a>
-In most cases the amount paid by the parents was
-supplemented by gifts from the friends and relations
-who attended the christening.<a id='r643' /><a href='#f643' class='c021'><sup>[643]</sup></a> Thus the baby’s
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_280'>280</span>death meant a considerable pecuniary loss to the
-midwife. An example of her payment in such a case
-is given in Nicholas Assheton’s diary; he enters on
-Feb. 16, 1617. “My wife in labour of childbirth.
-Her delivery was with such violence as the child
-dyed within half an hour, and, but for God’s wonderful
-mercie, more than human reason could expect, shee
-had dyed, ... divers mett and went with
-us to Downham; and ther the child was buried ...
-my mother wᵗʰ me laid the child in the grave....
-Feb. 24, the midwyfe went from my wyffe to Cooz
-Braddyll’s wyffe. She had given by my wyffe xxs
-and by me vs.”<a id='r644' /><a href='#f644' class='c021'><sup>[644]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The Churchwardens at Cowden entered in their
-account book 1627 “Item, paide for a poore woman’s
-lying in 3. 0.” 1638. “to John Weller’s wife for her
-attendance on the widow Smithe when she lay in 2. 0.”<a id='r645' /><a href='#f645' class='c021'><sup>[645]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The account book of Sir John Foulis of Ravelstone
-gives many details of the expenses incurred at confinements
-in Scotland. His wife appears to have been
-attended by a doctor, as well as a midwife, and the
-latter’s fee was the higher of the two. The payments
-are in Scots money.<a id='r646' /><a href='#f646' class='c021'><sup>[646]</sup></a> “Mar. 26 1680, to the doctor
-Steinsone for waiting on my wife in her labour 2
-guines at 33 P. sterl. p.piece, 27. 16. 0, to Elspie
-dicksone, midwife, 40. 12. 0, to her woman 2. 18. 0.”
-On November 26, 1692 there is another payment
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_281'>281</span>“to my wife to give doctor Sibbald for his attendance
-on her in childbed and since to this day 5 guineas
-66. 0. 0.” Jan. 31, 1704 “to my son Wᵐ to give the
-midwife when his wife was brought to bed of her
-sone Joⁿ 3 guineas 42. 12. 0. to my douchter
-Crichtoune to give the midwife for me halfe a
-guinie 7. 2. 0.”</p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The size of the gratuities given to the midwife by
-the friends and acquaintances who gathered at a
-society christening in London may be judged from
-Pepys, who enters in his diary when he was Godfather
-with Sir W. Pen to Mrs. Browne’s child “I did give
-the midwife 10<i>s.</i>”<a id='r647' /><a href='#f647' class='c021'><sup>[647]</sup></a> His gratuities to people of lower
-rank were smaller, and of course the gifts made by
-the “common people” and those of the gentry in the
-provinces were much more modest.</p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>In the latter part of the century there are indications
-of a growing tendency among the upper classes to
-replace the midwife by the doctor. The doctors
-encouraged the tendency. Their treatises on midwifery,
-of which several were published during this
-time, deprecate any attempt on the midwife’s part
-to cope with difficult cases. Dr. Hugh Chamberlain
-points out “nor can it be so great a discredit
-to a Midwife ... to have a Woman or Child
-saved by a Man’s assistance, as to suffer either to die
-under her own hand.”<a id='r648' /><a href='#f648' class='c021'><sup>[648]</sup></a> In making this translation
-of Maurice’s work on Midwifery, Chamberlain omitted
-the anatomical drawings, “there being already severall
-in English; as also here and there a passage that
-might offend a chast English eye; and being not
-absolutely necessary to the purpose; the rest I have,
-as carefully as I could, rendered into English for the
-benefit of our midwives.”<a id='r649' /><a href='#f649' class='c021'><sup>[649]</sup></a> This line of thought is
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_282'>282</span>carried yet further by McMath, who says in the preface
-to “The Expert Mid-wife” that he has “of purpose
-omitted a Description of the parts in a woman destined
-to Generation, not being absolutely necessary to this
-purpose, and lest it might seem execrable to the
-more chast and shamfaced through Baudiness and
-Impurity of words; and have also endeavoured to keep
-all Modesty, and a due Reverence to Nature: nor am
-I of the mind with some, as to think there is no
-Debauchery in the thing, except it may be in the
-abuse.”<a id='r650' /><a href='#f650' class='c021'><sup>[650]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The notion that it was indecent for a woman to
-understand the structure and functions of her own
-body fitted in with the doctors’ policy of circumscribing
-the midwife’s sphere; McMath continues
-“Natural Labour, where all goes right and naturally,
-is the proper work of the Midwife, and which she alone
-most easily performs aright, being only to sit and attend
-Nature’s pace and progress ... and perform
-some other things of smaller moment, which Physicians
-gave Midwifes to do, as unnecessary &amp; indicent
-for them, and for the Matronal chastity (tho some
-of Old absurdly assigned them more, and made it
-also their office to help the Delivery, and not by
-Medicaments only and others, but Inchantments
-also.)”<a id='r651' /><a href='#f651' class='c021'><sup>[651]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Clearly in a profession which often holds in its
-hands the balance between life and death, those
-members who are debarred from systematic study and
-training must inevitably give way sooner or later
-to those who have access to all the sources of learning,
-but the influences which were prejudicing women’s
-position in midwifery during the seventeenth century
-were not wholly founded on such reasonable
-grounds; they were also affected by much more
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_283'>283</span>general, undefined and subtle causes. It may even
-be doubted whether the superior knowledge of the
-seventeenth century doctor actually secured a larger
-measure of safety to the mother who entrusted herself
-to his management than was attained by those who
-confided in the skill of an experienced and intelligent
-midwife. Chamberlain admits that the practice of
-doctors “not onely in England but throughout
-Europe; ... hath very much caused the
-report, that where a man comes, one or both [mother
-or child] must necessarily dye; and makes many for
-that reason forbear sending, untill either be dead or
-dying.”<a id='r652' /><a href='#f652' class='c021'><sup>[652]</sup></a> He continues “my Father, Brothers and
-myself (though none else in Europe that I know) have
-by God’s blessing, and our industry, attained to,
-and long practised a way to deliver a woman in this
-case without any prejudice to her or her Infant.”</p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The discovery to which Chamberlain refers was
-the use of forceps, which he and his family retained
-as a profound secret. Therefore this invention did
-not rank among the advantages which other doctors
-possessed over midwives at this period. Even when,
-a century later, the use of forceps became generally
-understood, the death rate in childbed was not
-materially reduced, for it was only with the discovery
-of the value of asepsis that this heavy sacrifice was
-diminished. We must therefore look for the explanation
-of the growing ascendancy of male practitioners
-to other causes beside the hypothetical standard
-of their greater efficiency. Their prestige rested
-partly on an ability to use long words which convinced
-patients of their superior wisdom; it was
-defended by what was fast becoming a powerful
-corporation; and more potent in its effect was
-the general deterioration in the position of women
-which took place during the century. A lessening
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_284'>284</span>of confidence in womanly resourcefulness and capacity
-in other walks of life, could not fail to affect popular
-estimation of their value here too; and added to this
-were the morbid tendencies of the increasing numbers
-of oversexed society women who were devoted to
-a life of pleasure. The fact that similar tendencies
-were visible in France, where an excellent scientific
-training was open to women, shows that the capture
-of the profession by men was not only due to superior
-skill.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The famous French Midwife, Madame Bourgeois,
-told her daughter “There is a great deal of artifice
-to be used in the pleasing of our Women, especially
-the young ones, who many times do make election of
-Men to bring them to bed. I blush to speak of them,
-for I take it to be a great peice of impudence to have
-any recourse unto them, unless it be a case of
-very great danger. I do approve, I have approved
-of it, and know that it ought to be done, so that it
-be concealed from the Woman all her life long;
-nor that she see the surgeon any more.”<a id='r653' /><a href='#f653' class='c021'><sup>[653]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Whatever may have been the explanation, midwifery
-had ceased to be a monopoly for women when the
-“man-midwife” made his appearance in the sixteenth
-century, but it is only in the latter half of the seventeenth
-century that the profession passes definitely
-under the control of men. The doctors who then
-secured all the more profitable class of work, were united
-in a corporation which was often directed by men
-possessed of a disinterested enthusiasm for truth,
-and considerable proficiency in their art, even though
-many in their ranks might regard their profession
-merely as a means for acquiring personal fame or wealth.
-But the interest of the corporations of physicians
-and surgeons was centred more upon their profession
-than upon the general well-being of the community,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_285'>285</span>and they did not regard it as part of their duty to
-secure competent assistance in childbirth for every
-woman in the community. They took a keen
-professional interest in the problems of midwifery,
-but the benefits of their research were only available
-for the wives or mistresses of rich men who could afford
-to pay high fees. Far from making any effort to
-provide the same assistance for the poor, the policy
-of the doctors, with some exceptions, was to withold
-instruction from the midwives on whom the poor
-depended, lest their skill should enable them to
-compete with themselves in practice among the
-wealthy.</p>
-<h3 class='c032'><i>Conclusion.</i></h3>
-
-<p class='c029'>The foregoing examination of the character and
-extent of women’s professional services has brought
-several interesting points to light. It has been shown
-that when social organisation rested upon the basis
-of the family, as it chiefly did up to the close of the
-Middle Ages, many of the services which are now
-ranked as professional were thought to be specially
-suited to the genius of women, and were accordingly
-allotted to them in the natural division of labour
-within the family. The suggestions as to the character
-and conditions of these services during the Middle
-Ages, rest upon conjectures drawn from the comparison
-of a few generally accepted statements concerning
-the past, with what appears at the opening of the
-seventeenth century to be a traditional attitude
-to women, an attitude which was then undergoing
-rapid modifications. A more thorough and detailed
-examination of their position in the preceding centuries
-may show that it was far less stable than is generally
-supposed, but such a discovery need not disturb the
-explanation which is here given of the tendencies
-deciding the scope of women’s professional activity
-within in the seventeenth century.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_286'>286</span>First among these was the gradual emergence of
-the arts of teaching and healing, from the domestic or
-family sphere to a professional organisation. Within
-the domestic sphere, as women and men are equally
-members of the family, no artificial impediment
-could hinder women from rendering the services
-which nature had fitted them to perform; moreover,
-the experience and training which family life provided
-for boys, were to a large extent available for girls
-also. Coincident with a gradual curtailment of
-domestic activities may be observed a marked tendency
-towards the exclusion of women from all interests
-external to the family. The political theories of
-the seventeenth century regarded the State as an
-organisation of individual men only or groups of men, not
-as a commonwealth of families; in harmony with
-this idea we find that none of the associations which
-were formed during this period for public purposes,
-either educational, economic, scientific or political,
-include women in their membership. The orientation
-of ideas in the seventeenth century was drawing
-a rigid line between the State, in which the individual
-man had his being, and family matters. The third
-tendency was towards the deterioration of women’s
-intellectual and moral capacity, owing to the narrowing
-of family life and the consequent impoverishment
-of women’s education. The fourth tendency was
-towards an increasing belief in the essential inferiority
-of women to men.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>It will be seen that these tendencies were interdependent.
-Their united effect was revolutionary, gradually
-excluding women from work for which in former days,
-nature, it was supposed, had specially designed them.
-Thus the teaching of young children, both girls and
-boys, had been generally entrusted to women, many
-men acknowledging in later life the excellence of the
-training which they had received from their mothers,
-and it cannot be doubted that women were upon the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_287'>287</span>whole successful in transmitting to their children the
-benefit of the education and experience which they had
-themselves received. But no amount of didactic skill
-can enable persons to teach what they do not themselves
-possess, and so the scope of the training given
-by women depended upon the development of their
-own personalities. When family traditions and family
-organisation were disturbed, as perhaps they would
-have been in any case sooner or later, but as they were to
-a more marked extent during the Civil War, the sources
-from which women derived their mental and spiritual
-nourishment were dried up, and without access to
-external supplies their personality gradually became
-stunted.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Women were virtually refused access to sources
-of knowledge which were external to the family,
-and hence, with a few exceptions they were
-confined in the teaching profession to the most
-elementary subjects. Women were employed in
-the “dames schools” attended by the common
-people, or, when they could read and write themselves,
-mothers often instructed their children in these arts;
-but the governesses employed by gentlefolks, or the
-schoolmistresses to whom they sent their daughters
-for the acquisition of the accomplishments appropriate
-to young ladies, were seldom competent to undertake
-the actual teaching themselves; for this masters were
-generally engaged, because few women had gone
-through the training necessary to give them a sound
-understanding of the arts in question. Women were
-not incapable of teaching, but as knowledge became
-more specialized and technical, the opportunities which
-home life provided for acquiring such knowledge
-proved inadequate; and consequently women were
-soon excluded from the higher ranks of the teaching
-profession.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The history of their relation to the arts of Healing
-is very similar. Other things being equal, as to some
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_288'>288</span>extent they were when the greater part of human
-life was included within the family circle, the psychic
-and emotional female development appears to make
-women more fitted than men to deal with preventive
-and remedial medicine. The explanation of
-this fact offers a fascinating field for speculation,
-but involves too wide a digression for discussion here,
-and in its support we will only point out the fact
-that in the old days, when no professional services
-were available, it was to the women of the family,
-rather than to the men, that the sick and wounded
-turned for medicine and healing. Yet in spite of this
-natural affinity for the care of suffering humanity,
-women were excluded from the sources of learning
-which were being slowly organised outside the family
-circle, and were thus unable to remain in professions
-for which they were so eminently suited.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The suspicion that the inferior position which women
-occupied in the teaching profession and their exclusion
-from the medical profession, was caused rather by the
-absence of educational opportunities than by a physiological
-incapacity for the practice of these arts, is
-strengthened by the remarkable history of Midwifery;
-which from being reserved exclusively for women and
-practised by them on a professional basis from time
-immemorial, passed in its more lucrative branches into
-the hands of men, when sources of instruction were
-opened to them which were closed to women. Just
-as the amateur woman teacher was less competent
-than the man who had made art or the learned languages
-his profession, so did the woman who treated
-her family and neighbours by rule of thumb, appear less
-skilful than the professional doctor, and the uneducated
-midwives brought their profession into disrepute.
-The exclusion of women from all the sources of
-specialised training was bound to re-act unfavourably
-upon their characters, because as family life
-depended more and more upon professional services for
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_289'>289</span>education and medical assistance, fewer opportunities
-were offered to women for exerting their faculties
-within the domestic sphere and the general incompetence
-of upper-class women did in fact become
-more pronounced.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c001' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_290'>290</span>
- <h2 class='c011'>Chapter VII<br /> <br />CONCLUSION</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c045'>Great productive capacity of women under conditions of Family and
-Domestic Industry—no difference between efficiency of labour when
-applied for domestic purposes or for trade.</p>
-<p class='c039'>Rate of wages no guide to real value of goods produced—married women
-unlikely to work for wages when possessing capital for domestic
-industry—Women’s productiveness in textile
-industries—Agriculture—Other industries—Professional services.</p>
-
-<p class='c039'>Capitalism effected economic revolution in women’s position—By
-(<i>a</i>) substitution of individual for family wages—(<i>b</i>)
-employment of wage-earners on master’s premises—(<i>c</i>) rapid
-increase of master’s wealth.</p>
-
-<p class='c039'>Exclusion of women from skilled trades not originally due to sex
-jealousy—Women’s lack of specialised training due, (<i>a</i>) to its
-being unnecessary; (<i>b</i>) the desire to keep wife in subjection to
-husband—Reduction in the value to her family of woman’s productive
-capacity by substitution of wage-earning for domestic industry—Effect
-of her productive energy on her maternal functions and her social
-influence.</p>
-<p class='c012'><span class='sc'>The</span> preceding chapters have demonstrated the great
-productive capacity which women possessed when
-society was organised on the basis of Family and
-Domestic Industry. There was then no hard-and-fast
-line dividing domestic occupations from other
-branches of industry, and thus it has not been possible
-to discover how much of women’s labour was given
-to purposes of trade and how much was confined to
-the service of their families; but as labour was at this
-time equally productive, whether it was employed
-for domestic purposes or in Trade, it is not necessary
-to discriminate between these two classes of production
-in estimating the extent to which the community
-depended upon women’s services. The goods produced
-and the services rendered to their families by wives
-and daughters, must if they had been idle have
-employed labour otherwise available for Trade; or
-to put the position in another way, if the labour of
-women had been withdrawn from the domestic
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_291'>291</span>industries and applied to Trade, more goods would have
-been produced for the market, which goods the said
-women’s families would then have obtained by purchase;
-but while by this means the trade of the country
-would be greatly increased, unless the efficiency of
-women’s labour had been raised by its transference
-from domestic to other forms of industry, the wealth
-of the community would remain precisely the same.</p>
-<p class='c013'>Nevertheless, in estimating a country’s prosperity
-domestic production is generally overlooked, because,
-as the labour devoted to it receives no wages and its
-results do not enter the market, there is no mechanical
-standard for estimating its value. For similar
-reasons Home Trade is commonly considered to be
-of less importance than Foreign Trade, because,
-as the latter passes through the Customs, its money
-value can be much more readily computed, and because
-the man in the street, like King Midas, has imagined
-that gold is wealth. But we are here considering
-the production of goods and services, not of gold,
-and from this point of view, the woman who spins
-thread to clothe her family, and she who furnishes
-by her industry milk and cheese, eggs and pork,
-fruit and vegetables for the consumption of her
-family, has produced exactly the same goods, no
-more and no less, than if she had produced them
-for the market, and whether these goods are
-consumed by her own family or by strangers makes
-absolutely no difference to their real value.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Neither can the value of a woman’s productive
-activity be judged by the wages she receives, because
-the value of a pair of sheets is the same, whether
-the flax has been spun by a well-to-do farmers’ wife
-who meanwhile lives in affluence, or by a poor woman
-earning wages which are insufficient to keep body
-and soul together. The labour required for spinning
-the flax was the same in either case, for there was
-no difference in the type of spinning wheel she used,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_292'>292</span>or in her other facilities for work; it was only later,
-when organisations for trading purposes had enormously
-increased productive capacity by the introduction
-of power and the sub-division of labour,
-that the same productive capacity, devoted to domestic
-purposes, became relatively inferior in results. This
-change between the relative efficiency of domestic and
-industrial labour could not fail, when it took place, to
-exert a marked influence on the economic position
-of married women, because while their husbands
-earned sufficient money to pay rent and a few outgoing
-expenses, they had no inducement to work for
-wages, their labour being more productive at
-home. Women who fed and clothed themselves
-and their children by means of domestic industry
-gratified in this way their sense of independence
-as effectively as if they had earned the equivalent
-money by trade or wages. Considering the low rates
-paid to women, it may be supposed that few worked
-for wages when possessed of sufficient stock to employ
-themselves fully in domestic industries; on the other
-hand there were a considerable number who were in
-a position to hire servants, and who, having learnt
-a skilled trade, devoted themselves to business,
-either on their own account or jointly with their
-husbands.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>If the general position of women in the whole
-field of industry is reviewed, it will be seen that,
-beyond question, all the textile fabrics used at this
-time, with the exception of a few luxuries, were made
-from the thread which was spun by women and children,
-the export trade in cloth also depending entirely on
-their labour for spinning and to some extent for
-the other processes. In agriculture the entire management
-of the milch cows, the dairy, poultry, pigs,
-orchard and garden, was undertaken by the women,
-and though the mistress employed in her department
-men as well as women servants, the balance was redressed
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_293'>293</span>by the fact that women and girls were largely
-employed in field work. The woman’s contribution
-to farming is also shown by the fact that twice as
-much land was allowed to the colonists who were
-married as to those who were single. The expectation
-that the women and children in the husbandman
-class would produce the greater part of their own food
-is proved by the very low rate of wages which
-Quarter Sessions fixed for agricultural labour, and by
-the fact that when no land was available it was recognised
-that the wage-earner’s family must be dependent
-on the poor rate.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Though the part which women played in agriculture
-and the textile industries is fairly clear, a great
-obscurity still shrouds their position in other directions.
-One fact however emerges with some distinctness;
-women of the tradesman class were sufficiently capable
-in business, and were as a rule so well acquainted with
-the details of their husband’s concerns, that a man
-generally appointed his wife as his executrix, while
-custom universally secured to her the possession of
-his stock, apprentices and goodwill in the event of
-his death. That she was often able to carry on his
-business with success, is shown by incidental references,
-and also by the frequency with which widow’s names
-occur in the lists of persons occupying various trades.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>How much time the wives of these tradesmen
-actually spent over their husband’s business is a point
-on which practically no evidence is forthcoming,
-but it seems probable that in the skilled trades they
-were seldom employed in manual processes for which
-they had received no training, but were occupied
-in general supervision, buying and selling. It is not
-therefore surprising to find women specially active
-in all branches of the Retail Trade, and girls
-were apprenticed as often to shopkeepers as to
-the recognised women’s trades such as millinery and
-mantua-making.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_294'>294</span>The assistance of the wife was often so important
-in her husband’s business, that she engaged
-servants to free her from household drudgery, her own
-productive capacity being greater than the cost of a
-servant’s wages. Apart from exceptional cases of
-illness or incompetence, the share which the wife
-took in her husband’s business, was determined rather
-by the question whether he carried it on at home or
-abroad than by any special appropriateness of the said
-business to the feminine disposition. Thus, though
-women were seldom carpenters or masons, they figure
-as pewterers and smiths. In every business there are
-certain operations which can conveniently be performed
-by women, and when carried on at home within the
-compass of the family life, the work of a trade was
-as naturally sorted out between husband and wife,
-as the work on a farm. No question arose as to the
-relative value of their work, because the proceeds
-became the joint property of the family, instead of
-being divided between individuals.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>With regard to the services which are now classed
-as professional, those of healing and teaching were
-included among the domestic duties of women.
-Illness was rife in the seventeenth century, for the
-country was devastated by recurrent epidemics of
-small-pox and the plague, besides a constant liability
-to ague and the other ordinary ailments of mankind;
-thus the need for nursing must have been very great.
-The sick depended for their tending chiefly upon the
-women of their own households, and probably the
-majority of English people at this time, received
-medical advice and drugs from the same source.
-Women’s skill in such matters was acquired by experience
-and tradition, seldom resting upon a scientific
-basis, for they were excluded from schools and universities.
-Acquired primarily with a view to domestic
-use, such skill was extended beyond the family
-circle, and women who were wise in these matters
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_295'>295</span>sometimes received payment for their services.
-Midwifery alone was really conducted on professional
-lines, and though practised in former days exclusively
-by women, it was now passing from their hands
-owing to their exclusion from the sources of advanced
-instruction.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>It is difficult to estimate the respective shares taken
-by men and women in the art of teaching, for while
-the young were dependent on home training, they
-received attention from both father and mother,
-and when the age for apprenticeship arrived the task
-was transferred to the joint care of master and mistress.
-With regard to learning of a scholastic character,
-reading was usually taught by women to both boys
-and girls, who learnt it at home from their mothers, or
-at a dame’s school; but the teaching of more advanced
-subjects was almost exclusively in the hands of men,
-although a few highly educated women were engaged
-as governesses in certain noble families where the
-Tudor tradition still lingered. Generally speaking,
-however, when a girl’s curriculum included such
-subjects as Latin and Arithmetic her instruction,
-like her brothers, was received from masters, and this
-was equally true in the case of accomplishments which
-were considered more appropriate to the understanding
-of young ladies. Women rarely, if ever, undertook
-the teaching of music, painting or dancing. From
-these branches of the teaching profession they were
-debarred by lack of specialised training.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Thus it will be seen that the history of women’s
-position in the professions, follows a very similar course
-to that of the developments in the world of Industry;
-work, for which they appeared peculiarly fitted by
-disposition or natural gifts, while it was included
-within the domestic sphere, gradually passed out of
-their hands when the scene of their labour was
-transferred to the wider domains of human life.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Capitalism was the means by which the revolution
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_296'>296</span>in women’s economic position was effected in the
-industrial world. The three developments which
-were most instrumental to this end being:—</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>(<i>a</i>) the substitution of an individual for a family
-wage, enabling men to organise themselves in the
-competition which ruled the labour market, without
-sharing with the women of their families all the
-benefits derived through their combination.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>(<i>b</i>) the withdrawal of wage-earners from home life
-to work upon the premises of the masters, which
-prevented the employment of the wage-earner’s
-wife in her husband’s occupation.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>(<i>c</i>) the rapid increase of wealth, which permitted
-the women of the upper classes to withdraw from all
-connection with business.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Once the strong hand of necessity is relaxed there
-has been a marked tendency in English life for the withdrawal
-of married women from all productive activity,
-and their consequent devotion to the cultivation of idle
-graces; the parasitic life of its women has been in fact
-one of the chief characteristics of the parvenu class.
-The limitations which surrounded the lives of the
-women belonging to this class are most vividly described
-in Pepys’ Journal, where they form a curious
-contrast to the vigour and independence of the women
-who were actively engaged in industry. The whole
-Diary should be read to gain a complete idea of the
-relations of married life under these new circumstances,
-but a few extracts will illustrate the poverty of Mrs.
-Pepys’ interests and her abject dependence on her
-husband. Most curious of all is Pepys’ naïve admission
-that he was trying to “make” work for his wife,
-which furnishes an illustration of the saying “coming
-events cast their shadows before them.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Nov. 12, 1662. much talke and difference
-between us about my wife’s having a woman, which I
-seemed much angry at that she should go so far in it
-without ... my being consulted. 13th. Our
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_297'>297</span>discontent again and sorely angered my wife, who
-indeed do live very lonely, but I do perceive that it
-is want of worke that do make her and all other
-people think of ways of spending their time worse.
-June 8. 1664. Her spirit is lately come to be other
-than it used to be, and now depends upon her having
-Ashwell by her, before whom she thinks I shall not
-say nor do anything of force to her, which vexes me,
-and makes me wish that I had better considered all that
-I have done concerning my bringing my wife to this
-condition of heat. Aug. 20. I see that she is confirmed
-in it that all I do is by design, and that my very keeping
-of the house in dirt, and the doing this and anything
-else in the house, is but to find her employment
-to keep her within, and from minding of her pleasure,
-which though I am sorry to see she minds it, is true
-enough in a great degree. Jan. 14. 1667-8. I do
-find she do keep very bad remembrance of my former
-unkindness to her and do mightily complain of her
-want of money and liberty, which will rather hear
-and bear the complaint of than grant the contrary....
-Feb. 18. a ring which I am to give her
-as a valentine. It will cost me near £5 she costing
-me but little in comparison with other wives, and
-have not many occasions to spend money on her.
-Feb. 23. with this and what she had she reckons
-that she hath above £150 worth of jewels of one kind
-or another; and I am glad of it, for it is fit the wretch
-should have something to content herself with.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>While the capitalistic organisation of industry
-increased the wealth of the masters, it condemned
-a large proportion of the craftsmen to remain permanently
-in the position of journeymen or wage-earners
-with the incidental result that women were excluded
-from their ranks in the more highly skilled trades.
-Under the old system of Family Industry, labour and
-capital had been united in one person or family group
-of persons, but capitalism brought them into conflict;
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_298'>298</span>and the competition which had previously only existed
-between rival families was introduced into the
-labour market, where men and women struggled
-with each other to secure work and wages from the
-capitalist. The keystone of the journeymen’s position
-in their conflict with capital, lay in their ability
-to restrict their own numbers by the enforcement
-of a long apprenticeship and the limitation of the
-number of apprentices. On gaining this point the
-journeymen in any trade secured a monopoly which
-enabled them to bargain advantageously with the
-masters. Their success raised them into the position
-of a privileged class in the world of labour, but did
-nothing to improve the position of the other wage-earners
-in unskilled or unorganised trades.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>When their organisation was strong enough the
-journeymen allowed no unapprenticed person to be
-employed upon any process of their trade, however
-simple or mechanical; a policy which resulted in the
-complete exclusion of women, owing to the fact that
-girls were seldom, if ever, apprenticed to these trades.
-It has been shown that under the old system, craftsmen
-had been free to employ their wives and
-daughters in any way that was convenient, the widow
-retaining her membership in her husband’s gild or
-company with full trading privileges, and the daughters
-able, if they wished, to obtain their freedom by
-patrimony. Journeymen however now worked on
-their masters’ premises, their traditions dating from
-a time when they were all unmarried men; and
-though the majority of them had renounced the expectation
-of rising above this position of dependence,
-the idea that they should extend their hardly won
-privileges to wife or daughter never occurred to
-them.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Thus came about the exclusion of women from the
-skilled trades, for the wives of the men who became
-capitalists withdrew from productive activity, and the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_299'>299</span>wives of journeymen confined themselves to domestic
-work, or entered the labour market as individuals,
-being henceforward entirely unprotected in the conflict
-by their male relations. Capitalistic organisation
-tended therefore to deprive women of opportunities
-for sharing in the more profitable forms of production,
-confining them as wage-earners to the unprotected
-trades. It would be an anachronism to ascribe this
-tendency to sex-jealousy in the economic world.
-The idea of individual property in wages had
-hardly arisen, for prevailing habits of thought still
-regarded the earnings of father, mother and children
-as the joint property of the family, though controlled
-by the father; and thus the notion that it could be
-to men’s advantage to debar women from well-paid
-work would have seemed ridiculous in the seventeenth
-century. Though the payment of individual wages
-was actually in force, their implication was hardly
-understood, and motives of sex-jealousy do not dominate
-the economic world till a later period. While the
-family formed the social unit the interests of husband
-and wife were bound so closely together, that neither
-could gain or suffer without the other immediately
-sharing the loss or advantage.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The momentous influence which some phases of
-Capitalism were destined to exert upon the economic
-position of women, were unforeseen by the men who
-played a leading part in its development, and passed
-unnoticed by the speculative thinkers who wrote
-long treatises on Theories of State Organisation.
-The revolution did not involve a conscious demarcation
-of the respective spheres of men and women
-in industry; its results were accidental, due to the
-fact that women were forgotten, and so no attempt
-was made to adjust their training and social status
-to the necessities of the new economic organisation.
-The oversight is not surprising, for women’s relation
-to the “Home” was regarded as an immutable
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_300'>300</span>law of Nature, inviolable by any upheaval in
-external social arrangements.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Thus the idea that the revolution in women’s
-economic position was due to deliberate policy may
-be dismissed. Capitalism is a term denoting a force
-rather than a system; a force that is no more interested
-in human relations than is the force of gravitation;
-nevertheless its sphere of action lies in the social
-relations of men and women, and its effects are modified
-and directed by human passions, prejudices
-and ideals. The continuance of human existence
-and its emancipation from the trammels that hamper
-its progress, must depend upon the successful mastery
-of this as of the other forces of Nature.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>If we would understand the effect of the
-introduction of Capitalism on the social organism,
-we must remember that the subjection of women
-to their husbands was the foundation stone of
-the structure of the community in which Capitalism
-first made its appearance. Regarded as being equally
-the law of Nature and the Law of God, no
-one questioned the necessity of the wife’s
-obedience, lip service being rendered to the doctrine
-of subjection, even in those households where it was
-least enforced. Traditional ideas regarded the common
-wealth, or social organisation, as an association of
-families, each family being a community which was
-largely autonomous, and was self-contained for most
-of life’s purposes; hence the order and health of
-the commonwealth depended upon the order and
-efficiency of the families comprised within it. Before
-the seventeenth century the English mind could not
-imagine order existing without an acknowledged
-head. No one therefore questioned the father’s
-right to his position as head of the family, but in his
-temporary absence, or when he was removed by death,
-the public interest required his family’s preservation,
-and the mother quite naturally stepped into his
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_301'>301</span>place, with all its attendant responsibilities and
-privileges. In this family organisation all that the
-father gained was shared by the mother and children,
-because his whole life, or almost his whole life, was
-shared by them. This is specially marked in the
-economic side of existence, where the father did not
-merely earn money and hand it to the mother to
-spend, but secured for her also, access to the means
-of production; the specialised training acquired
-by the man through apprenticeship did not merely
-enable him to earn higher wages, but conferred upon
-his wife the right to work, as far as she was able, in
-that trade.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Capitalism, however, broke away from the family
-system, and dealt direct with individuals, the first
-fruit of individualism being shown by the exclusion
-of women from the journeymen’s associations; and
-yet their exclusion was caused in the first place by
-want of specialised training, and was not the necessary
-result of Capitalism, for the history of the Cotton
-Trade shows, in later years, that where the labour of
-women was essential to an industry, an effective
-combination of wage-earners could be formed which
-would include both sexes.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Two explanations may be given for women’s lack
-of specialised training. The first, and, given the prevailing
-conditions of Family Industry, probably the most
-potent reason lay in the belief that it was unnecessary.
-A specialised training, whether in Science, Art or
-Industry, is inevitably costly in time and money;
-and as in every trade there is much work of a character
-which needs no prolonged specialised training, and
-as in the ordinary course of a woman’s life a certain
-proportion of her time and energy must be devoted
-to bearing and rearing children, it seemed a wise
-economy to spend the cost of specialised training
-on boys, employing women over those processes which
-chiefly required general intelligence and common-sense.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_302'>302</span>It has been shown that this policy answered well
-enough in the days of Domestic and Family Industry
-when the husband and wife worked together, and
-the wife therefore reaped the advantages of the
-trading privileges and social position won by her
-husband. It was only when Capitalism re-organised
-industry on an individual basis, that the
-wife was driven to fight her economic battles
-single handed, and women, hampered by the want
-of specialised training, were beaten down into
-sweated trades.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The second explanation for women’s lack of specialised
-training is the doctrine of the subjection of women
-to their husbands. While the first reason was more
-influential during the days of Family and Domestic
-Industry, the second gains in force with the development
-of Capitalism. If women’s want of specialised
-training had been prejudicial to their capacity for
-work in former times, such training would not have
-been withheld from them merely through fear of
-its weakening the husband’s power, because the husband
-was so dependent upon his wife’s assistance. There
-was little talk then of men “keeping” their wives;
-neither husband nor wife could prosper without
-the other’s help. But the introduction of Capitalism,
-organising industry on an individual basis, freed men
-to some extent from this economic dependence on
-their wives, and from henceforward the ideal of the
-subjection of women to their husbands could be
-pursued, unhampered by fear of the dangers resulting
-to the said husbands by a lessening of the wife’s
-economic efficiency.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>A sense of inferiority is one of the prime requisites
-for a continued state of subjection, and nothing
-contributes to this sense so much, as a marked
-inferiority of education and training in a society
-accustomed to rate everything according to its
-money value. The difference in earning capacity
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_303'>303</span>which the want of education produces, is in
-itself sufficient to stamp a class as inferior.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>There is yet another influence which contributed
-to the decline in the standard of women’s education
-and in their social and economic position, which is so
-noticeable in the seventeenth century. This period
-marks the emergence of the political idea of the
-“mechanical state” and its substitution for the
-traditional view of the nation as a commonwealth of
-families. Within the family, women had their position,
-but neither Locke, nor Hobbes, nor the obscure writers
-on political theory and philosophy who crowd the last
-half of the seventeenth century, contemplate the inclusion
-of women in the State of their imagination. For
-them the line is sharply drawn between the spheres of
-men and women; women are confined within the circle
-of their domestic responsibilities, while men should
-explore the ever widening regions of the State. The
-really significant aspect of this changed orientation
-of social ideas, is the separation which it introduces
-between the lives of women and those of men, because
-hitherto men as well as women lived in the Home.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The mechanical State <i>quâ</i> State did not yet exist
-in fact, for the functions of the Government did not
-extend much beyond the enforcement of Justice and
-the maintenance of Defence. Englishmen were
-struggling to a realisation of the other aspects
-of national life by means of voluntary associations
-for the pursuit of Science, of Trade, of Education, or
-other objects, and it is in these associations that the trend
-of their ideas is manifested, for one and all exclude
-women from their membership; to foster the charming
-dependence of women upon their husbands, all independent
-sources of information were, as far as possible,
-closed to them. Any association or combination of
-women outside the limits of their own families was
-discouraged, and the benefits which had been extended
-to them in this respect by the Catholic Religion
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_304'>304</span>were specially deprecated. Milton’s statement sums
-up very fairly the ideas of this school of thought
-regarding the relations that should exist between
-husband and wife in the general scheme of things.
-They were to exist “He for God only, she for God
-in him.” The general standard of education resulting
-from such theories was inevitably inferior; and the
-exclusion of women from skilled industry and the
-professions, was equally certain to be the consequence
-sooner or later, of the absence of specialised training.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The general effect upon women of this exclusion,
-which ultimately limited their productive capacity
-to the field of household drudgery, or to the lowest
-paid ranks of unskilled labour, belongs to a much
-later period. But one point can already be discerned
-and must not be overlooked. This point is the alteration
-which took place in the value to her family of
-a woman’s productive capacity when her labour was
-transferred from domestic industry to wage-earning,
-under the conditions prevailing in the seventeenth
-century. When employed in domestic industry
-the whole value of what she produced was retained
-by her family; but when she worked for wages her
-family only received such a proportion of it as she was
-able to secure to them by her weak bargaining power in
-the labour market. What this difference amounted to
-will be seen when it is remembered that the wife of
-a husbandman could care for her children and feed
-and clothe herself and them by domestic industry,
-but when working for wages she could not earn enough
-for her own maintenance.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>This depreciation of the woman’s productive value
-to her family did not greatly influence her position
-in the seventeenth century, because it was then only
-visible in the class of wage-earners, and into this
-position women were forced by poverty alone. The
-productive efficiency of women’s services in domestic
-industry remained as high as ever, and every family
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_305'>305</span>which was possessed of sufficient capital for domestic
-industry, could provide sufficient profitable occupation
-for its women without their entry into the labour
-market. Independent hard-working families living
-under the conditions provided by Family and
-Domestic Industry, still formed the majority of
-the English people. The upper classes, as far
-as the women were concerned, were becoming more
-idle, and the number of families depending wholly
-on wages was increasing, but farmers, husbandmen and
-tradesmen, still formed a class sufficiently numerous
-to maintain the hardy stock of the English race unimpaired.
-Thus, while the productive capacity of
-women was reduced in the seventeenth century
-by the idleness of the <i>nouveau riche</i> and by the inefficiency
-of women wage-earners which resulted from
-their lack of nourishment, it was maintained at the
-former high level among the intermediate and much
-larger class, known as “the common people.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Though from the economic point of view intense
-productive energy on the part of women is no longer
-necessary to the existence of the race, and has been
-generally abandoned, an understanding of its effect
-upon the maternal functions is extremely important
-to the sociologist. No complete vital statistics
-were collected in the seventeenth century, but an
-examination of the different evidence which is still
-available, leaves no doubt that the birth-rate was
-extremely high in all classes, except perhaps that of
-wage-earners. It was usual for active busy women
-amongst the nobility and gentry, to bear from twelve
-to twenty children, and though the death rate was
-also high, the children that survived appear to have
-possessed abundant vitality and energy. Neither does
-the toil which fell to the lot of the women among the
-common people appear to have injured their capacity
-for motherhood; in fact the wives of husbandmen
-were the type selected by the wealthy to act as wet nurses
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_306'>306</span>for their children. It is only among the class of wage-earners
-that the capacity for reproduction appears
-to have been checked, and in this class it was the under-feeding,
-rather than the over-working of the mothers,
-which rendered them incapable of rearing their infants.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The effect of the economic position of women, must
-be considered also in relation to another special
-function which women exercise in society, namely
-the part which they play in the psychic and moral
-reactions between the sexes. This subject has seldom
-been investigated in a detached and truly scientific
-spirit, and therefore any generalisations that may be
-submitted have little value. It will only be observed
-here that the exercise by women of productive energy
-in the Elizabethan period, was not then inconsistent
-with the attainment by the English race of its high-water
-mark in vitality and creative force, and that a
-comparison of the social standards described by Restoration
-and Elizabethan Dramatists, reveals a decadence,
-which, if not consequent upon, was at least coincident
-with, the general withdrawal of upper-class women
-from their previous occupation with public and private
-affairs.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Undoubtedly the removal of business and public
-interests from the home, resulted in a loss of educational
-opportunities for girls; a loss which was not made good
-to them in other ways, and which therefore produced
-generations of women endowed with a lower mental
-and moral calibre. The influence of women upon
-their husbands narrowed as men’s lives drifted away
-from the home circle and centred more round
-clubs and external business relations. Hence it came
-about that in the actual social organisation prevailing
-in England during the last half of the seventeenth
-century, the influence or psychic reaction of women
-upon men was very different in character and much
-more limited in scope, than that exercised by them
-in the Elizabethan period. When considered in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_307'>307</span>regard to the historical facts of this epoch, it will be
-noticed that the process by which the vital forces
-and energy of the people were lowered and which in
-common parlance is termed emasculation, accompanied
-an evolution which was in fact depressing the
-female forces of the nation, leaving to the male forces
-an ever greater predominance in the directing of the
-people’s destiny. The evidence given in the preceding
-chapters is insufficient to determine what is cause and
-what is effect in such complicated issues of life, and only
-shows that a great expenditure of productive energy
-on the part of women is not, under certain circumstances,
-inconsistent with the successful exercise of
-their maternal functions, nor does it necessarily
-exhaust the creative vital forces of the race.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The enquiry into the effect which the appearance
-of Capitalism has produced upon the economic position
-of women has drawn attention to another issue,
-which concerns a fundamental relation of human
-society, namely to what extent does the Community
-or State include women among its integral members,
-and provide them with security for the exercise
-of their functions, whether these may be of the
-same character or different from those of men.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>It has been suggested that the earlier English
-Commonwealth did actually embrace both men and
-women in its idea of the “Whole,” because it was
-composed of self-contained families consisting of
-men, women and children, all three of which are
-essential for the continuance of human society;
-but the mechanical State which replaced it, and whose
-development has accompanied the extension of Capitalism,
-has regarded the individual, not the family,
-as its unit, and in England this State began with the
-conception that it was concerned only with male
-individuals. Thus it came to pass that every womanly
-function was considered as the private interest of
-husbands and fathers, bearing no relation to the life
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_308'>308</span>of the State, and therefore demanding from the
-community as a whole no special care or provision.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The implications of such an idea, together with
-the effect which it produced upon a society in which
-formerly women had been recognised as members,
-though perhaps not equal members, cannot be fully
-discussed in this essay; the investigation would
-require a much wider field of evidence than can
-be provided from the survey of one century. But
-from the mere recognition that such a change took
-place, follow ideas of the most far-reaching significance
-concerning the structure of human society;
-we may even ask ourselves whether the instability,
-superficiality and spiritual poverty of modern life,
-do not spring from the organisation of a State which
-regards the purposes of life solely from the male
-standpoint, and we may permit ourselves to hope that
-when this mechanism has been effectively replaced by
-the organisation of the whole, which is both male and
-female, humanity will receive a renewal of strength
-that will enable them to grapple effectively with the
-blind force Capitalism;—that force which, while
-producing wealth beyond the dreams of avarice, has
-hitherto robbed us of so large a part of the joy of
-creation.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c001' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_309'>309</span>
- <h2 class='c011'>AUTHORITIES.<br /> <br />(<span class='c046'><i>The numbers in leaded type are the press marks in the British Museum.</i></span>)</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c047'>Account of Several Workhouses for Employing and Maintaining
-the Poor, etc. <i>London</i> 1725. <b>1027 i. 18 (9).</b></p>
-<p class='c048'>Act of Common Council for the reformation of sundry abuses
-practised by divers persons upon the common markets
-and streets of the City of London. 1631. <b>21 l. 5. (4).</b></p>
-<p class='c048'>Act for the settlement and well ordering of the severall
-Publick Markets within the City of London.
-1674. <b>21 l. 5 (58).</b></p>
-<p class='c048'>Acts and Ordinances of the Interregnum II. 1651.
-<b>Add. MSS. 36308.</b></p>
-<p class='c048'>Answer to a Paper of Reflections on the Project for laying
-a Duty on English Wrought Silks. <b>8223 e. 9 (75).</b></p>
-<p class='c048'>Arber, Edward. Transcript of the Registers of the Company
-of Stationers of London. 1554-1640. <i>London</i>, 1876.</p>
-<p class='c048'>Assheton, Nicholas, Esq. Journal of; ed. by Rev. F. R.
-Raines. <i>Chetham Soc.</i>, 1848.</p>
-<p class='c048'>Astell, Mary. A serious proposal to the Ladies for the
-advancement of their true and greatest Interest, by a
-Lover of her sex. 1694. <b>12314 a. 22.</b></p>
-<p class='c048'>Atkinson, J. C. Quarter Sessions Records for the North
-Riding of Yorkshire. <i>London</i>, 1884. <b>R. ac. 8190.</b></p>
-<p class='c048'>Bacon, Francis. Works of; ed. by Spedding. <i>London</i>, 1858.</p>
-<p class='c048'>Bacon, Sir Nathaniel, of Stiffkey, Norfolk. Official Papers
-of, 1580-1620. <i>Royal Hist. Soc. Camden, 3rd Series</i>.
-1915.</p>
-<p class='c048'>Baillie, Lady Grisell. Household Book of, ed. by R. Scott-Moncrieff.
-<i>Edinburgh</i>, 1911. <b>R. ac. 8256.</b></p>
-<p class='c048'>Banks, John. A Journal of the Life of. <i>London</i>, 1712.</p>
-<p class='c048'>Barrett, C. R. B. History of the Society of Apothecaries
-of London. <i>London</i>, 1905. <b>7680 f. 14.</b></p>
-<p class='c048'>Bateson, Mary. Borough Customs.
-<i>Selden Society, Vol. XVIII.</i>, 1904. <b>R. ac. 2176.</b></p>
-<p class='c048'>—— Records of the Borough of Leicester.
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-<p class='c048'>Reasons for a Limited Exportation of Wooll. 1677. <b>712 g. 16 (14).</b></p>
-<p class='c048'>Reasons humbly offered to the Honourable House of Commons
-by the Leather-dressers and Glovers. <b>816 m. 13 (39).</b></p>
-<p class='c048'>Remarks upon Mr. Webber’s Scheme and the Draper’s
-Pamphlet. 1741. <b>1029 d. 4 (5).</b></p>
-<p class='c048'>Report of Commission on Decay of Clothing Trade. 1622.
-Stowe <b>554 fo. 45-49.</b></p>
-<p class='c048'>Report of the Commissioners on the Condition of the Hand-loom
-weavers, 1841. Mr. Chapman’s Report.</p>
-<p class='c048'>Riley, H. T. Chronicles of the Mayors and Sheriffs of
-London, 1188-1274. <i>London</i> 1863. <b>9510 h. 12.</b></p>
-<p class='c048'>—— Memorials of London and London Life. 1868.</p>
-<p class='c048'>Riley, W. H. Translation of the Liber Albus, of the City
-of London. Compiled 1419, by John Carpenter, clerk,
-and Richard Whittington, Mayor. <i>London</i> 1861. <b>9510 f. 22.</b></p>
-<p class='c048'>Rockley, Francis, Esq., Presenteth that the Revenue of Excise.
-<b>816 m. 6 (2).</b></p>
-<p class='c048'>Rogers, J. E. Thorold. History of Agriculture and Prices.
-<i>Oxford</i> 1866-1902.</p>
-<p class='c048'>—— Oxford City Documents. 1891. <b>R. ac. 8126/10.</b></p>
-<p class='c048'>Rogers, Timothy, M.A. The Character of a Good Woman,
-both in a Single and Marry’d State, in a Funeral Discourse
-on Prov. 31, 10, occasion’d by the Decease of Mrs.
-Elizabeth Dunton. <i>London</i> 1697. <b>1417 b. 29.</b></p>
-<p class='c048'>Rolls of Parliament.</p>
-<p class='c048'>Salford, The Portmote or Court Leet Records of the Borough
-or Town and Royal Manor of, 1597-1669.
-<i>Cheetham Society</i> 1902. <i>Vol. xlvi. new series.</i> <b>R. ac. 8120.</b></p>
-<p class='c048'><span class='pageno' id='Page_318'>318</span>Scheme to prevent the running of Irish Wools to France.
-By a Merchant of London. <i>London</i> 1743. <b>1029 d. 4 (3).</b></p>
-<p class='c048'>Second Humble Address from the Poor Weavers and Manufacturers
-to the Ladies. <b>816 m. 14 (84).</b></p>
-<p class='c048'>Sharp, Jane. The Midwives Book or the whole art of Midwifery
-discovered, by Mrs. Jane Sharp, Practioner in the
-art of Midwifery above thirty years. <i>London</i> 1671. <b>1177 b. 19.</b></p>
-<p class='c048'>Shaw’s, Mrs., Innocency restored and Mr. Clendon’s
-Calumny retorted, notwithstanding his late Triumphing,
-by sundry Depositions, making out more than ever she
-by Discourse or writing did positively charge upon him.
-<i>London</i> 1653. <b>E. 730 596 (8).</b></p>
-<p class='c048'>Short Essay upon Trade in General, etc., by a Lover of his
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-as he knew in their life. <i>Ed. by Sir Henry Ellis.</i>
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-<i>London</i> 1651. <b>E. 1258.</b></p>
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-Written at first MDXCVIII., brought down from the
-year 1633 to the present time by John Strype.
-<i>London</i> 1720. <b>1791 d. 5.</b></p>
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- Account Book of Cowden. Vol. XX.
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- Hastings Documents. Vol. XXIII.
- Herstmonceux Castle House Accounts. Vol. XLVIII.
- Mayfield Overseer’s Accounts. Vol. XVIII.
- Moore, Rev. Giles, Journal of. Vol. I.
- Stapley, Rich., Diary of. Vol. II.</p>
-<p class='c048'>Taylor, Randall. A Discourse of the Growth of England
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-<i>Surtees Society, Vol. LXII.</i> 1873 <b>R. ac. 8045/50.</b></p>
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-<p class='c048'>Trade of England. Revived and the abuses thereof Rectified.
-<i>London</i> 1681. <b>712 g. 16 (20).</b></p>
-<p class='c048'>True Account how Mr. Reading’s House at Santoft happened
-to be Burnt. <b>816 m. 10/112.</b></p>
-<p class='c048'>True Case of the Scots Linen Manufacture. <b>816 m. 13 (55).</b></p>
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-Civil Wars. <i>London</i> 1892. <b>2407 f. 12.</b></p>
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-<p class='c048'>Watson, Wm. The Clergyman’s Law. 1747. <b>516 m. 10.</b></p>
-<p class='c048'>Weavers True Case, or the wearing of Printed Calicoes and
-Linnen Destructive to the Woollen and Silk Manufacturers.
-1719. <b>T. 1814 (8).</b></p>
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-Pewterers of the City of London. <i>London</i> 1902. <b>8248 f. 15.</b></p>
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-<b>London</b> 1885. <b>2367 bb. 7.</b></p>
-<p class='c048'>Wilkinson, Robert. The Merchant Royal, or woman a ship,
-etc. in conjugal duty, set forth in a collection of ingenious
-and delightful wedding sermons. Original ed., 1607.
-<i>London</i> 1732. <b>4454 b. 9.</b></p>
-<p class='c048'>Wycherley, Wm. Plays. <i>London</i> 1735. <b>644 a. 19.</b></p>
-<p class='c048'>Yonge, Walter. Diary at Colyton and Axminster, Co.
-Devon. 1604-1628. <i>Ed. by Geo. Roberts.</i>
-<i>Camden Society 1848.</i> <b>R. ac. 8113/41.</b></p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c001' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_320'>320</span>
- <h2 class='c011'>WAGES ASSESSMENTS.</h2>
-</div>
-<table class='table3' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='28%' />
-<col width='71%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <th class='c037'><i>County.</i></th>
- <th class='c049'><i>Reference.</i></th>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c037'>Buckingham</td>
- <td class='c050'>Hamilton, A. H. A., Quarter Sessions Records from Queen Eliz. to Queen Anne.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c037'>Cardigan</td>
- <td class='c050'>Dyson, Humfrey, Proclamations of Queen Elizabeth. G6463 (331b.).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c037'>Chester</td>
- <td class='c050'>Harleian MSS., 2054 (3) f. 5 2b.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c037'>Derbyshire</td>
- <td class='c050'>Cox, J. C., Three Centuries of Derbyshire Annals.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c037'>Devonshire</td>
- <td class='c050'>Hamilton, A. H. A., Quarter Sessions Record.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c037'>Dorsetshire</td>
- <td class='c050'>Sussex Archeological Collections, Vol. I., p. 75.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c037'>Essex</td>
- <td class='c050'>Ruggles, Thomas, History of the Poor, pp. 123-5. 1027 i. 1.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c037'>Gloucestershire</td>
- <td class='c050'>Rogers, J. E. Thorold, History of Agriculture and Prices. Vol. VI., p. 694.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c037'>Hertfordshire</td>
- <td class='c050'>Hardy, W. J., Hertford County Records.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c037'>Kent</td>
- <td class='c050'>Rogers, J. E. T., History of Agriculture and Prices. Vol. VII., p. 623.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c037'>Kingston-upon-Hull</td>
- <td class='c050'>Dyson, Humfrey, Proclamations. G6463 (77).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c037'>Lancashire</td>
- <td class='c050'>Rogers, J. E. T., History of Agriculture and Prices. Vol. VI., p. 689.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c037'>Lincolnshire</td>
- <td class='c050'>Hist. MSS. Com., Duke of Rutland, Vol. I., p. 460.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c037'>London</td>
- <td class='c050'>Lord Mayor’s Proclamations. 21 h. 5 (61).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c037'>Middlesex</td>
- <td class='c050'>Hardy, W. J., Middlesex County Records.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c037'>Norfolk</td>
- <td class='c050'>English Historical Review, Vol. XIII., p. 522.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c037'>Rutland</td>
- <td class='c050'>Archeologia, Vol. XI., pp. 200-7.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c037'>St. Albans</td>
- <td class='c050'>Gibbs, Corporation Records.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c037'>Somerset</td>
- <td class='c050'>Somerset Quarter Sessions Records.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c037'>Suffolk</td>
- <td class='c050'>Cullum, Sir John., History of Hawstead.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c037'>Warwickshire</td>
- <td class='c050'>Archeologia, Vol. XI., p. 208.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c037'>Wiltshire</td>
- <td class='c050'>Hist. MSS. Com. Var. Coll., Vol. I., p. 163.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c037'>Worcestershire</td>
- <td class='c050'>Hist. MSS. Com. Var. Coll., Vol. I., p. 323.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c037'>Yorkshire:<br /> East Riding</td>
- <td class='c050'>Rogers, J. E. T., History of Agriculture and Prices, Vol. VI., p. 686.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c037'>Yorkshire:<br /> North Riding</td>
- <td class='c050'>Atkinson, J. C., Yorkshire, North Riding Quarter Sessions Records, Vols. VI. and VII.</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c001' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_321'>321</span>
- <h2 id='fnotes' class='c011'>FOOTNOTES</h2>
-</div>
-<hr class='c051' />
-<div class='footnote' id='f1'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r1'>1</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>The term “individual wages” is used here to denote wages paid either to men
-or women as individuals, and regarded as belonging to the individual person, while
-“family wages” are those which cover the services of the whole family and belong
-to the family as a whole. This definition differs from the common use of the terms,
-but is necessary for the explanation of some important points. In ordinary conversation
-“individual wages” indicate those which maintain an individual only, while
-“family wages” are those upon which a family lives. This does not imply a real
-difference in the wages, as the same amount of money can be used to support one
-individual in comfort or a family in penury. In modern times the law recognises a
-theoretic obligation on the part of a man to support his children, but has no power
-to divert his wages to that purpose. His wages are in fact recognised as his individual
-property. The position of the family was very different in the seventeenth century.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f2'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r2'>2</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Gentleman’s Magazine</i>, 1834, Vol. I., p. 531. <i>A
-Letter to Lord Althorp on the Poor Laws</i>, by Equitas.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f3'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r3'>3</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Verney Family, <i>Memoirs during the Civil War</i>, Vol. I., p. 210.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f4'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r4'>4</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i>, Vol. I., p. 12.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f5'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r5'>5</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Harley, <i>Letters of Brilliana, the Lady</i>, pp. 146-7, 1641.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f6'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r6'>6</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Harley, <i>Letters of Brilliana, The Lady</i>, p. 167, 1642.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f7'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r7'>7</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Murray (Lady), <i>Memoirs of Lady Grisell Baillie</i>, p. 13.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f8'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r8'>8</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Thornton (Mrs. Alice), <i>Autobiography</i>, p. 101,
-(Surtees’ Society Vol. lxii.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f9'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r9'>9</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Fell (Sarah), <i>Household Account Book</i>.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f10'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r10'>10</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Crosfield (H. G.), <i>Life of Margaret Fox, of Swarthmore
-Hall</i>, p. 232, 1699.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f11'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r11'>11</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Costello, <i>Eminent Englishwomen</i>, Vol. III, p. 55.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f12'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r12'>12</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Falkland, (The Lady), Her Life</i>, pp. 18-20.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f13'>
-<p class='c052'><span class='label'><a href='#r13'>13</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Falkland (The Lady), Her Life</i>, pp. 131-132.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f14'>
-<p class='c052'><span class='label'><a href='#r14'>14</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i>, pp. 132-3.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f15'>
-<p class='c052'><span class='label'><a href='#r15'>15</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Verney Family</i>, Vol. II., p. 240, 646.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f16'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r16'>16</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Calendar State Papers</i>, Domestic, April 8, 1646.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f17'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r17'>17</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Hunter (Joseph), History and Topography of Ketteringham</i>, p. 46.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f18'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r18'>18</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Nash, <i>Hist. and Antiq. of Worcester</i>, Vol. I., p. 492.
-It appears by depositions in the Court of Chancery that she
-paid off £25,000 which was charged upon the estate, and only
-sold lands to the value of £8,854, <i>Ibid.</i>, p. 496.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f19'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r19'>19</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Nicholas Papers</i>, Vol. I., p. 97. Charles Parker to Lord Hatton.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f20'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r20'>20</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Fanshawe (Lady), Memoirs of</i>, pp. 80-81.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f21'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r21'>21</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Nicholas Papers</i>, Vol. III., pp. 274-6. Marquis of Ormonde to
-Sir Ed. Nicholas, 1656.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f22'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r22'>22</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>State Papers, Domestic</i>, cccclxxi. 36, Nov. 7, 1640.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f23'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r23'>23</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>S.P.D.</i>, cccclxxi. 37, 1640.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f24'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r24'>24</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Life of Colonel Hutchinson</i>, by his Wife, pp. 334-336.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f25'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r25'>25</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Sussex Arch. Coll.</i>, Vol. x., p. 5. To Sir William Campion from
-Herbert Morley, July 23rd, 1645.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f26'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r26'>26</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i>, Vol. x., p. 6.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f27'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r27'>27</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>C.S.P.D.</i> lxvii, 129, 1611.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f28'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r28'>28</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>C.S.P.D.</i> clxii, 8, March 2, 1630.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f29'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r29'>29</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>S.P.D.</i> xlviii, 119, 22nd October, 1609.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f30'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r30'>30</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>S.P.D.</i> liii, 131, April 1610.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f31'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r31'>31</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>C.S.P.D.</i> lxxvii, 5 April 5, 1614.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f32'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r32'>32</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>S.P.D.</i> cxi, 121, 1619.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f33'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r33'>33</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>S.P.D.</i> clxxx, 66, 1624.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f34'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r34'>34</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>S.P.D.</i> cccxxiii, 109, 18th June, 1637.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f35'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r35'>35</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>S.P.D.</i> cccxxiii., 7, <i>Bk. of Petitioners</i>, Car. I.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f36'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r36'>36</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>S.P.D.</i> ccciii., 65, Dec. 6th, 1635.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f37'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r37'>37</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>S.P.D.</i> cccvi., 27, 1635.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f38'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r38'>38</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>S.P.D.</i> cccxlvi., 2, Feb. 1st, 1637.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f39'>
-<p class='c052'><span class='label'><a href='#r39'>39</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Jonson, (Ben.) <i>The Devil is an Ass</i>, Act III., Scene iv.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f40'>
-<p class='c052'><span class='label'><a href='#r40'>40</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>(<i>Ibid.</i>), Act IV., Scene ii.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f41'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r41'>41</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Middlesex Co. Rec. Sess. Books</i>, p. 18, 1690.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f42'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r42'>42</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Braithwaite, (Richd.), <i>The English Gentleman</i>, p. 300, 1641.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f43'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r43'>43</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Overall <i>Remembrancia, Analytical Index to</i>, p. 519, 1582.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f44'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r44'>44</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Council Register</i>, 8th August, 1628.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f45'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r45'>45</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Holroyd, Joseph (Cloth Factor) and Saml. Hill (clothier), <i>Letter
-Bks. of</i>, pp. 18-25.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f46'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r46'>46</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>C.R.</i>, 3rd December, 1630.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f47'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r47'>47</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>S.P.D.</i> ccxxxvi., 45, 12th, April, 1633.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f48'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r48'>48</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Hist. MSS. Com.</i>, 14 Rep., VIII., p. 284, 1655.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f49'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r49'>49</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>S.P.D.</i> ccxcii., 24, March 23, 1636/7., <i>Proceedings of
-Gunpowder Commissioners</i>.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f50'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r50'>50</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>S.P.D.</i> xx., 62, Feb. 9th, 1626.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f51'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r51'>51</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>S.P.D.</i> cxcvii., 64, July, 1631.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f52'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r52'>52</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>S.P.D.</i>, clix., 27th Jan. 1630.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f53'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r53'>53</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>S.P.D.</i>, clxxxi., 138, 1630.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f54'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r54'>54</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Foulis, Sir John, <i>Account Book</i>, 5th Jan., 1705.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f55'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r55'>55</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>British Friend</i>, II., p. 113.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f56'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r56'>56</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Case of Dorothy Petty</i>, 1710.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f57'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r57'>57</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Newcastle and Gateshead, History of</i>, Vol. III., p. 242.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f58'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r58'>58</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i>, p. 237.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f59'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r59'>59</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i>, p. 252.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f60'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r60'>60</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>S.P.D.</i>, cclx., 21, 1634.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f61'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r61'>61</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>S.P.D.</i>, cxlviii., 52, 1623.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f62'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r62'>62</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>S.P.D.</i>, dxxi., 147. Addenda Charles I., 1625.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f63'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r63'>63</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>England’s Way</i>, 1614. <i>Harleian Misc.</i>, Vol. III., p. 383.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f64'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r64'>64</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Child, Sir J., <i>A New Discourse of Trade</i>, pp. 4-5. 1694.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f65'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r65'>65</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Howell, (Jas.), <i>Familiar Letters</i>, p. 103.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f66'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r66'>66</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Vives, <i>Office and Duties of a Husband</i>, trans. by Thos. Paynell.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f67'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r67'>67</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Wycherley, <i>The Gentleman Dancing Master</i>, p. 21.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f68'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r68'>68</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Astell, (Mary), <i>A Serious Proposal</i>, p. 145, 1694.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f69'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r69'>69</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Pepys, (Sam.), <i>Diary</i>, Vol. II., p. 113, Dec. 31, 1662.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f70'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r70'>70</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Wilkinson, (Robert), <i>Conjugal Duty</i>, pp. 13-17.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f71'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r71'>71</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Banks (John), <i>Journal</i>, p. 101, 1684.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f72'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r72'>72</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Banks, (John), <i>Journal</i>, pp. 129-30.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f73'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r73'>73</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Batt (Mary), <i>Testimony of the Life and Death of</i>, pp. 1-3, 1683.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f74'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r74'>74</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Batt (Mary), <i>Testimony to Life and Death of</i>, pp. 5-7, 1683.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f75'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r75'>75</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Fitzherbert (Sir Anth.), <i>Boke of Husbandrye</i>.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f76'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r76'>76</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Rogers (J. E. Thorold), <i>Hist. Agric. and Prices</i>, Vol. VI., pp.
-686-9, assess. for Yorks, East Riding, Ap. 26, 1593.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f77'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r77'>77</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Josselin (R), <i>Diary</i>, p. 86, April 9th, and 30th, 1650.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f78'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r78'>78</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Somerset Quarter Sessions Records</i>, Vol. III, pp. 370-1, 1659.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f79'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r79'>79</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Fell (Sarah) Household Accounts</i>, p. 317, 1676.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f80'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r80'>80</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Fell (Sarah)</i>, <i>Household Accounts</i>, p. 339, 1676.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f81'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r81'>81</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i>, p. 386, 1677.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f82'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r82'>82</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Bownas (Samuel)</i>, <i>Life</i>, pp. 116-17.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f83'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r83'>83</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Salford Portmote Records</i>, Vol. I, p. 3, 1597.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f84'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r84'>84</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Salford Portmote Records</i>, Vol. II., pp. 6-7, 1633.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f85'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r85'>85</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Guilding, <i>Reading Records</i>, Vol. IV., p. 512, 1653.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f86'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r86'>86</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ferguson, <i>Municipal Records of Carlisle</i>, p. 278.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f87'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r87'>87</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Howell, <i>Familiar Letters</i>, p. 290, 1644.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f88'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r88'>88</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Foulis (Sir John, of Ravelston), <i>Acct. Bk.</i>, p. 158.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f89'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r89'>89</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Eyre, (Capt. Adam), <i>A Dyurnall</i>, p. 16, p. 36.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f90'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r90'>90</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Heylin, (Peter)</i>, pp. 18-19.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f91'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r91'>91</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>King (Gregory), <i>Natural and Political Observations, etc.</i></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f92'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r92'>92</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Martindale, (Adam),</i> <i>Life</i>, p. 172.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f93'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r93'>93</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i>, p. 190.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f94'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r94'>94</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Clode, (C.M.) <i>Merchant Taylors</i>, Vol. I., p. 323.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f95'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r95'>95</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Pseudonismus, <i>Considerations concerning Common Fields and
-Enclosures</i>, 1654.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f96'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r96'>96</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Pseudonismus, <i>A Vindication of the Considerations concerning Common
-Fields and Enclosures</i>, 1656.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f97'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r97'>97</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Potatoes were already in use in Ireland, but are scarcely referred to
-during this period by English writers.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f98'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r98'>98</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Osborne (Dorothy), Letters</i>, pp. 103, 4. 1652-1654.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f99'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r99'>99</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>30<i>s.</i> Susanna Suffolke a young maid holds a customary cottage, ... and
-renteth per annum 2<i>d.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c024'>£28 Eliz. Filoll (widdow) holdeth one customary tenement. Rent per annum
-26<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c024'>£2 Mary Stanes holdeth one customary cottage (late of Robert Stanes) and
-renteth per annum 7<i>d.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c024'>£12 Margaret Dowe (widdow) holdeth one customary tenement (her eldest son
-the next heir) rent 7<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c024'>Among freeholders. Johan Mathew (widow) holdeth one free tenement and one
-croft of land thereto belonging ... containing three acres and a half and
-renteth 3<i>d.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c024'>(Stones, Jolley. 1628. From a List of Copyholders in West &amp; S. Haningfield,
-Essex.)</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f100'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r100'>100</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Taylor. (Randall), <i>Discourse of the Growth of England, etc.</i>, p.
-96, 1689.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f101'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r101'>101</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Pepys, Vol. IV, p. 428. 14 July, 1667.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f102'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r102'>102</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Hist. MSS. Miss. Com. Var. Coll.</i>, Vol. I. p. 170.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f103'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r103'>103</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>A comparison of the assessments which have been preserved, in the different
-counties shows that men’s earnings varied in the hay harvest from:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>4<i>d.</i> and meat and drink, or 8<i>d.</i> without, to</div>
- <div class='line'>8<i>d.</i> and meat and drink, or 1<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i> without</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c024'>and in the corn harvest from:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>5<i>d.</i> and meat and drink, or 10<i>d.</i> without, to</div>
- <div class='line'>1<i>s.</i> and meat and drink, or 2<i>s.</i> without</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c024'>Women’s wages varied in the hay harvest from:—</p>
-<div class='lg-container-l'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>1<i>d.</i> and meat and drink, or 4<i>d.</i> without, to</div>
- <div class='line'>6<i>d.</i> and meat and drink, or 1<i>s.</i> without</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c024'>and in the corn harvest from:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>2<i>d.</i> and meat and drink, or 6<i>d.</i> without, to</div>
- <div class='line'>6<i>d.</i> and meat and drink, or 1<i>s.</i> without</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c024'>The variations in these wages correspond with the price of corn in
-different parts of England and must not be regarded as necessarily
-representing differences in the real value of wages.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f104'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r104'>104</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Society of Antiquarians of Scotland, vol. xxxix, p. 125. <i>Dame Margaret
-Nicholson’s Account Book.</i></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f105'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r105'>105</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Best, <i>Rural Economy</i>, p. 36.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f106'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r106'>106</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i> p. 42.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f107'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r107'>107</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Best, <i>Rural Economy</i>, p. 59.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f108'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r108'>108</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i> pp. 93-4.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f109'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r109'>109</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i>, pp. 138-9. “The thatchers,” Best says, “have in most
-places 6<i>d.</i> a day &amp; theire meate in Summer time, ... yett we neaver use
-to give them above 4d ... because their dyett is not as in other
-places; for they are to have three meale a day, viz. theire breakfaste
-att eight of the clocke, ... theire dinner about twelve and theire
-supper about seaven or after when they leave worke; and att each
-meale fower services, viz. butter, milke, cheese, and
-either egges, pyes, or bacon, and sometimes porridge insteade of
-milke: if they meate themselves they have usually 10<i>d.</i> a day.”</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f110'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r110'>110</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Best, <i>Rural Economy</i>, p. 140.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f111'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r111'>111</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i> p. 142.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f112'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r112'>112</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Fiennes (Celia), <i>Through England on a Side-saddle</i>, p. 225.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f113'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r113'>113</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Suss. Arch. Coll. Vol. IV., p. 24. <i>Everendon Account Book.</i></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f114'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r114'>114</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Tingye (J. C.), <i>Eng. Hist. Rev.</i>, Vol. XIII., pp. 525-6.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f115'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r115'>115</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Pepys, Vol. V., p. 302. (11th June, 1668).</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f116'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r116'>116</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Foulis (Sir John) <i>Acct. Bk.</i>, p. 246.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f117'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r117'>117</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>“Aug. 7th., 1701 to my wife, to a Bleicher wife at bonaley for bleitching
-1. 3. 4.” (Scots)</p>
-
-<p class='c024'>“Jan. 28th, 1703 to my good douchter jennie to give tibbie tomsome for her
-attendance on my wife the time of her sickness 5.16.0 (Scots). (<i>Foulis (Sir
-John) Acct. Bk.</i> p. 295, 314.)</p>
-
-<p class='c024'>“Sep. 11th, 1676, pd. her (Mary Taylor) more for bakeing four days. Mothers
-Acct. 8<i>d.</i> (<i>Fell, (Sarah) Household Accts.</i> p. 309.)</p>
-
-<p class='c024'>“Pd. Widow Lewis for gathering herbs two daies 6<i>d.</i> (Sussex, Arch. Coll. xlviii.
-p. 120. <i>Extracts from the Household Account Book of Herstmonceux Castle.</i>)</p>
-
-<p class='c024'>“Paid to goodwife Stopinge for 2 bundles of Rushes at Whitsuntide for the
-Church, iiiji<i>d.</i> (<i>Churchwarden’s Account Book, Strood</i>, p. 95, 1612.”</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f118'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r118'>118</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Churchwarden’s Account Book, Strood</i>, p. 197. 1666.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f119'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r119'>119</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Cox (J. C.) <i>Churchwarden’s Accts.</i>, p. 309.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f120'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r120'>120</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Yorks. North Riding, Q.S. Rec.</i>, Vol. I., p. 62, Jan. 8., 1606-7.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f121'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r121'>121</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>A shoemaker servant of the best sorte being married, to have without
-meate and drinke for every dosin of shoes —— xxiji<i>d.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c024'>ditto unmarried to have by the yeare with meat and drink and withowte
-a leverye —— liij<i>s</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c024'>Millers and drivers of horses beinge batchelors then with meate and
-drinke and without a liverye and a payre of boots —— xlvi<i>s</i> viiji<i>d.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c024'>Millers and drivers of horses beinge married men shall not take more
-by the daye then with meate and drinke —— ivi<i>d.</i> and without viiji<i>d.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c024'>a man servant of the best sorte shall not have more by the yeare then
-with a levereye —— xl<i>s.</i> and without xlvj<i>s</i> viii<i>d.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c024'>the same, of the thirde sorte has only with a leverye xxvj<i>s</i> viii<i>d.</i> and without —— xxxiij<i>s</i> iiij<i>d.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c024'>while any sort of labourer, from the Annunciation of our Ladye until
-Michellmas has with meat and drink by the day —— iv<i>d.</i> and without
-viij<i>d.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c024'>From Michellmas to the Annunciation —— iii<i>d.</i> and without vij<i>d.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c024'>The best sorte of women servants shall not have more by the yeare than
-with a liverye —— xxj<i>s.</i> and without —— xxvj<i>s</i> viij<i>d.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c024'>while “a woman reaping of corne” shall not have “more by the daye then
-—— v<i>d</i> with meat and drink.”</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>(<i>Hertfordshire Assessment</i>, 1591).</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c024'>Every man-servant serving with any person as a Comber of Wooll to have
-by the yeare —— 40<i>s.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c024'>Every such servant being a single man and working by yᵉ pound to have by yᵉ
-pound —— 1ᵈ.</p>
-
-<p class='c024'>Every such servant being a marryed man and having served as an apprentice
-thereto according to the statute to have by yᵉ pound —— 2ᵈ.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>(<i>Assessment for Suffolk</i>, 1630).</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f122'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r122'>122</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Paid to a shovele man for 2 days to shovell in the cart rakes, 2<i>s.</i>
-(<i>Hertford Co. Rec.</i>, Vol. I, p. 233, 1672.) 2½ days’ work of a
-labourer, 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> (<i>ibid.</i>, p. 130, 1659).</p>
-
-<p class='c024'>For one daies work for one labourer, 1<i>s.</i> (<i>Strood
-Churchwarden’s Acc.</i> p. 182, 1662.)</p>
-
-<p class='c024'>pᵈ. to James Smith for one days’ work thatching about Widow Barber’s
-house, she being in great distress by reason she could not lie down in
-her bed and could get no help to do the same. 1<i>s.</i> 2<i>d.</i> (<i>Cratford
-Parish Papers</i>, p. 152, 1622.) Thatchers were paid more than
-ordinary labourers, being generally assessed at the same rate as a
-carpenter, or a mower in the harvest.</p>
-
-<p class='c024'><i>July 15, 1676.</i> Tho. Scott for workeinge hay 2 dayes, 4<i>d.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c024'>Tho. Greaves youngeʳ for workeinge hay 2 dayes, 4<i>d.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c024'><i>May 5, 1678</i>, Will Braithwᵗ foʳ threshing 6 dayes 1.00.</p>
-
-<p class='c024'><i>April 27, 1676</i>, by mᵒ. pᵈ. him for thatching 2 days at Petties
-Tenemᵗ, 8<i>d.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c024'><i>August 2, 1676.</i> pᵈ Margᵗ Dodgson foʳ workinge at hay &amp;
-otheʳ worke 5 weekes 03. 06.</p>
-
-<p class='c024'>pᵈ Mary Ashbrner for workinge at hay &amp; other worke 4 weekes &amp; 3 dayes,
-03. 0. 0.</p>
-
-<p class='c024'><i>Sept 4.</i> pᵈ. Will Nicholson wife foʳ weedinge in yᵉ garden &amp;
-pullinge hempe 12 dayes 01. 0. 0.</p>
-
-<p class='c024'><i>Oct. 2.</i> pᵈ. Issa. Atkinson for her daughtʳ Swingleinge 6 dayes
-01. 0. 0.</p>
-
-<p class='c024'><i>May 7, 1677.</i> pᵈ. Will Ashbrner for his daughteʳ harrowing here
-2 weekes 01. 0. 0. (<i>Fell (Sarah), House Acct.</i>)</p>
-
-<p class='c024'>Labourers’ wages 4<i>d.</i> per day.</p>
-
-<p class='c024'>(<i>Hist. MSS. Comm. Var. Coll.</i>, Vol. IV. 133, 1686. Sir Jno.
-Earl’s Inventory of goods.)</p>
-
-<p class='c024'>Weeks’ work common labourer, 3<i>s.</i> Thos. West, 1 week’s haying 2<i>s.</i>
-(<i>Sussex Arch. Coll.</i>, Vol. IV, p. 24, <i>Everendon Acc.
-Book</i>, 1618.)</p>
-
-<p class='c024'>Paid for a labourer 3 dayes to hoult the alees and carrying away the
-weedes, 1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> (<i>Cromwell Family, Bills and Receipts</i>, Vol. II,
-p. 233, 1635.)</p>
-
-<p class='c024'><i>Jan. 26, 1649.</i> Payd. to John Wainwright for 5 days worke
-1<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i> [Yorkshire].</p>
-
-<p class='c024'>(<i>Eyre (Capt. Adam) Dyurnall</i>, p. 117.)</p>
-
-<p class='c024'>Thos. Hutton, xiiij days work ijs. iiijd, his wyfe xij dayes iiijs.
-Thos. Hutton xiij dayes at hay vid, his wyfe 4 dayes xvji<i>d.</i> Leonell
-Bell, xiij dayes about hay, vjs. vji<i>d.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c024'>Tho. Bullman the lyke. iiijs. iiijd, Thos. Hutton 4 dayes at mowing
-corne, xvji<i>d.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c024'><i>Howard Household Book</i>, p. 40-41).</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f123'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r123'>123</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>The dietary in charitable institutions gives an idea of what was
-considered bare necessity.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>(<i>Children’s Diet in Christ Church Hospital</i>, 1704.)</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c024'>For breakfast, Bread and Beer. For dinner, Sunday, Tuesday, and
-Thursday, boiled beef and pottage. Monday, milk pottage, Wednesday,
-furmity. Friday old pease &amp; pottage. Saturday water
-gruel. For supper bread and cheese or butter for those that cannot eat
-cheese. Sunday supper, legs of mutton. Wednesday and Friday, pudding
-pies.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>(<i>Stow, London, Book</i> I, p. 182.)</div>
- <div><i>Diet for Workhouse, Bishopsgate Street, London.</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c024'>They have Breakfasts, dinners, and suppers every day in the week. For
-each meal 4 oz. bread, 1½ oz. cheese, 1 oz. butter, 1 pint of beer.
-Breakfast, four days, bread and cheese or butter and beer. Mondays a
-pint of Pease Pottage, with Bread and Beer. Tuesdays a Plumb Pudding
-Pye 9 oz. and beer. Wednesdays a pint of Furmity. On Friday a pint of
-Barley Broth and bread. On Saturdays, a plain Flower Sewet Dumpling
-with Beer. Their supper always the same, 4 oz. bread, 1½ of cheese or
-1 oz. of butter, and beer sufficient. (Stow, <i>London</i>, Book I, p.
-199).</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><i>Lady Grisell Baillie gives her servant’s diet</i>:</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c024'>Sunday they have boild beef and broth made in the great pot, and
-always the broth made to serve two days. Monday, broth made on Sunday,
-and a Herring. Tuesday, broth and beef. Wednesday, broth and two eggs
-each. Thursday, broth and beef. Friday, Broth and herring. Saturday,
-broth without meat, and cheese, or a pudden or blood-pudens, or a
-hagish, or what is most convenient. Breakfast and super,
-half an oat loaf or a proportion of broun bread, but
-better set down the loaf, and see non is taken or wasted, and a
-muchkin of beer or milk whenever there is any. At dinner a mutchkin of
-beer for each. <i>Baillie (Lady Grisell). Household Book</i>, pp.
-277-8. 1743.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f124'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r124'>124</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Cromwell Family, Bills and Receipts</i>, Vol. II., p. 233, 1635.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f125'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r125'>125</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Acts and Ordinances of the Interregnum</i>, II., p. 556. (For Maimed Soldiers and
-Widows of Scotland and Ireland, Sept 30, 1651.)</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f126'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r126'>126</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Yorks. North Riding, Q.S. Rec.</i>, Vol. VII., p. 106, 1690.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f127'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r127'>127</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Hertfordshire, Co. Rec.</i>, Vol. I., p. 258, 1675.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f128'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r128'>128</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Yorks. N.R. Q.S. Rec.</i>, Vol. VI., p. 242, 1675.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f129'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r129'>129</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i> p. 217, 1674.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f130'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r130'>130</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i> p. 260, 1674.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f131'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r131'>131</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Joane Weekes ... “hadd a maide childe placed to her to bee kept &amp;
-brought upp, the mother of which Childe was executed at the Assizes,
-six pounds per ann, proporconed toward the keepinge of the said childe
-... besides she desireth some allowance extraordinary for bringinge
-the said Childe to bee fitt to gett her livinge.” (<i>Somerset,
-Q.S. Rec.</i>, Vol. III, p. 28-9, 1647).</p>
-
-<p class='c024'>In 1663 a woman who was committed to the Castle of Yorke for felony
-and afterwards executed, was while there delivered of a male child,
-which was left in the gaol, and as it was not known where the woman
-was last an inhabitant the child could not be sent to the place of her
-settlement, Sir Tho. Gower was desired by Justices of Assize to take a
-course for present maintenance of the child. He caused it to be put
-unto the wife of John Boswell to be nursed and provided for with other
-necessaries. John Boswell and his wife have maintained the child ever
-since and have hitherto received no manner of allowance for the same.
-Ordered that the several Ridings shall pay their proportions to the
-maintenance past and present, after the rate of £5 per annum.
-(<i>Yorks. N.R. Q.S. Rec.</i>, Vol. VI, pp. 102-3, 1666.)</p>
-
-<p class='c024'>Marmaduke Vye was only to have £4 a year for keeping the child born in
-the gaol of Ivelchester whose mother was hanged for cutting of purses.
-(<i>Somerset Q.S. Rec.</i>, Vol. I, p. 101., 1613.)</p>
-
-<p class='c024'>Item payd to the said widowe Elkyns for Dyett and keeping of a poore
-child leafte upon the chardge of the parish at 11<i>d.</i> the weecke from
-the 14th of August, 1599, till this secound of Sept., 1601, every
-Saturday, being two yeres and three weeckes, videlicet 107 weeckes in
-toto vˡⁱ vijs. (<i>Ch. Accs., St. Michael’s in Bedwendine,
-Worcester</i>, p. 147.)</p>
-
-<p class='c024'>Itm pd. to Batrome’s wife of Linstead for keeping of Wright’s child 52
-weeks £3 0<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i> (Cratfield <i>Parish Papers</i>, p. 129, 1602.)</p>
-
-<p class='c024'>Pd to Geo. Cole to take and bring up Eliz. Wright, the daughter of Ann
-Wright according to his bond, £4. 0<i>s.</i> 0<i>d.</i> More towards her apparell
-5<i>s.</i>
-(<i>Ibid.</i> p. 137. 1609.)</p>
-
-<p class='c024'>Item paide Chart’s Child’s keeping by the week £4. 11<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i> Item for
-apparrell £1. 18<i>s.</i> 2<i>d.</i> Item paid to the surgeon for her. 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>
-(<i>Suss. Arch. Coll.</i>, Vol. xx., p. 101, <i>Acct. Bk of
-Cowden</i>. 1627.)
-for apparrelling Wm. Uridge and for his keeping this yeare £5. 12<i>s.</i>
-9<i>d.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c024'>(<i>Ibid.</i> p. 103, 1632.)</p>
-
-<p class='c024'>For the keep of William Kemsing 14 weeks £1. 2<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i> and 23 weeks at
-2<i>s.</i> per week, £2. 6<i>s.</i> 0<i>d.</i> and for apparrelling of him; and for his
-indentures; and for money given with him to put him out apprentice;
-and expended in placing him out £11. 17<i>s.</i> 9<i>d.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c024'>(<i>Ibid.</i> p. 107, 1650.)</p>
-
-<p class='c024'>John Mercies wief for keeping Buckles child, weekly, 1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c024'>John Albaes wief for keeping Partickes child, 1<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c024'>(<i>S.P.D.</i>, cccxlvii., 67, 1. Feb, 1637. Answer of Churchwardens to
-Articles given by J.P.’s for St. Albans).</p>
-
-<p class='c024'>George Arnold and Jas. Michell late overseers of the poore of the
-parishe of Othery ... had committed a poore child to the custody,
-keepinge and maintenance of ... Robert Harris promising
-him xiji<i>d.</i> weekly. (<i>Somerset, Q.S. Rec.</i>, Vol. III,
-p. 1, 1646.) Order for Thos. Scott, a poor, lame, impotent child, to
-be placed with Joanna Brandon; She to be paid 5<i>s.</i> a week for his
-maintenance. (<i>Middlesex Co. Rec.</i>, p. 180, <i>Sess. Book</i>,
-1698).</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f132'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r132'>132</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Cary, <i>Acc. Proceedings of the Corporation of Bristol</i>. 1700.
-“Their diets were made up of such provisions as were very wholesome,
-viz. Beef, Pease, Potatoes, Broath, Pease-porridge, Milk-porridge,
-Bread and Cheese, good Beer, Cabage, Carrots, Turnips, etc. it stood
-us (with soap to wash) in about sixteen pence per week for each of the
-one hundred girls.”</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f133'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r133'>133</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Account Workhouses</i>, 1725, p. 13, p. 37, p. 79.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f134'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r134'>134</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Guilding, <i>Reading</i>, Vol. II., p. 273, Jan. 16, 1625-6.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f135'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r135'>135</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Dunning, R. <i>Plain and Easie Method</i>, p. 5, 1686.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f136'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r136'>136</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Trade of England</i>, p. 10, 1681.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f137'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r137'>137</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Baillie (Lady Grisel), <i>House Book</i>, Introd. Ixiv.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f138'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r138'>138</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Fiennes (Celia), <i>Through England on a Side-saddle</i>, p. 224.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f139'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r139'>139</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Yorks. N.R. Q.S. Rec.</i>, Vol. I., p. 29. 1605-6.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f140'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r140'>140</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span> <i>Hertfordshire Co. Rec.</i>, Vol. I., p. 63. 1639-41.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f141'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r141'>141</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Hist., MSS. Com. Var. Coll.</i>, Vol. I, p. 113, <i>Wilts. Q.S.
-Rec.</i> 1646.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f142'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r142'>142</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Cox, <i>Derbyshire Annals</i>, Vol. II, p. 176, 1693.</p>
-
-<p class='c024'>The following cases are representative of an immense number of
-petitions from widows and the impotent poor:</p>
-
-<p class='c024'>1608. Margaret Johns having dwelt in Naunton Beauchamp for 55 years
-has now no house or room but dwells in a barn, she desires to have
-house room and will not charge the parish so long as she is able to
-work.</p>
-
-<p class='c024'>1620. Eleanor Williams charged with keeping of young child is now
-unprovided with house room for herself and her poor child, her husband
-having left the soile where they lately dwelled and is gone to some
-place to her unknown. She is willing “to relieve her child by her
-painful labour but wanteth a place for abode” prays to be provided
-with house room.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>(Bund, J. W. Willis, <i>Worcestershire Co. Records</i>, Vol. I., pp. 116-7, 337).</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c024'>1621. Overseers of Uggliebarbie to provide a suitable dwelling for 2
-women (sisters) if they refuse them a warrant, etc. (<i>Yorks. North
-Riding Q.S. Recs.</i>, Vol. III., p. 118.)</p>
-
-<p class='c024'>1672. Parish Officers of Scruton to provide a convenient habitation
-for Mary Hutchinson and to set her on work, and provide for her, etc.,
-until she shall recover the possession of certain lands in Scruton.
-(<i>Ibid.</i> Vol. VI., p. 175).</p>
-
-<p class='c024'>1684. Mary Marchant ... livinge in good estimation And repute for many
-years together; being very Carefull to maintaine herself And family
-for being prejudice to ye sd. Towne; ye petitioners husbande beinge
-abroad and driven Away; and returninge not backe Againe to her
-leaveinge ye petitioner with a little girle; being In want was put
-into a little cottage by &amp; with ye consent of ye sd. Towne; ye sd.
-Owner of ye sd. Tenement comeinge when ye petitioner was gon forth to
-worke leavinge her little girle in ye sd. house; ye sd. Owner get a
-locke And Key upp on ye door, where as your petitioner cannot Injoy
-her habitation wth peace and quietness; soe yt your petitioner is
-likely to starve for want of A habitation and child, etc.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>(Cox. J. C., <i>Derbyshire Annals</i>, Vol. II., pp. 175-6, <i>Q.S. Recs.</i>, 1684).</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f143'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r143'>143</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Somerset, Q.S. Rec.</i>, Vol. I., p. 41, 1609.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f144'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r144'>144</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Hist. MSS. Com. Var. Coll.</i>, Vol. I., p. 296, <i>Worcestershire,
-Q.S. Rec.</i>, 1617.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f145'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r145'>145</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Cox, J. C. <i>Derbyshire Annals</i>, Vol. II., pp. 173-4, 1649.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f146'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r146'>146</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Somerset Q.S. Rec.</i>, Vol. III., pp. 29, 58.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f147'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r147'>147</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Hertford Co. Rec.</i>, Vol. I., p. 100, 1652.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f148'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r148'>148</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Hertford Co. Rec.</i>, Vol. I., p. 370, 1687.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f149'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r149'>149</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Best, <i>Rural Econ.</i>, p. 125.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f150'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r150'>150</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>S.P.D.</i>, cccx., 104, 1635. Returns made by Justices of the Peace.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f151'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r151'>151</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Haynes, (John.), <i>Present State of Clothing</i>, p. 5, 1706.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f152'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r152'>152</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Hale, (Sir Matt). <i>Discourse touching Provision for the Poor</i>, p.
-6, 1683.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f153'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r153'>153</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>S.P.D.</i> ccclxxxv., 43. Mar. 8, 1638.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f154'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r154'>154</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>King (Gregory). <i>Nat. and Political Observations</i>, pp. 48-9.</p>
-<table class='table1' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='32%' />
-<col width='16%' />
-<col width='19%' />
-<col width='16%' />
-<col width='16%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <th class='c037'>NO. OF FAMILIES.</th>
- <th class='c016'><br /><br />PERSONS.</th>
- <th class='c053'>YEARLY INCOME PER HEAD.</th>
- <th class='c017'><br />EXPENSE PER HEAD.</th>
- <th class='c049'><br />LOSS PER HEAD.</th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c037'>50,000 Common Seamen</td>
- <td class='c016'>150,000</td>
- <td class='c053'>£7.</td>
- <td class='c017'>£7. 10<i>s.</i></td>
- <td class='c049'>10<i>s.</i></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c037'>364,000 Labouring people &amp; outservants</td>
- <td class='c016'>1,275,000</td>
- <td class='c053'>£4. 10<i>s.</i></td>
- <td class='c017'>£4. 12<i>s.</i></td>
- <td class='c049'>2<i>s.</i></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c037'>400,000 Cottagers &amp; Paupers</td>
- <td class='c016'>1,300,000</td>
- <td class='c053'>£2.</td>
- <td class='c017'>£2. 5<i>s.</i></td>
- <td class='c049'>5<i>s.</i></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c037'>35,000 Common soldiers</td>
- <td class='c016'>70,000</td>
- <td class='c053'>£7.</td>
- <td class='c017'>£7. 10<i>s.</i></td>
- <td class='c049'>10<i>s.</i></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f155'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r155'>155</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Hist. MSS. Com. Var. Coll.</i>, Vol. I., p. 298, <i>Worcestershire
-Q.S. Rec.</i>, 1618.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f156'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r156'>156</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Somerset, Q.S. Rec.</i>, Vol. III., p. 15, 1647.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f157'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r157'>157</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Somerset Q.S. Rec.</i>, Vol. III., p. 246, 1654.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f158'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r158'>158</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>“One Humfrey Naysh, a poore man hath ben remayning and dwellinge
-within the pish of Newton St. Lowe by the space of five years or
-thereabouts and now being maryed and like to haue charge of children,
-the pishioners Do endeuor to put the said Naishe out of their pish by
-setting of amcents and paynes in their Courts on such as shall give
-him house-roome, or suffer him to liue in their houses which he doth
-or offereth to rent for his money which the court conceiveth to be
-vnjust and not accordinge to lawe.” Overseers ordered to provide him a
-house for his money. (<i>Ibid.</i>, Vol. II, p. 19, 1626.)</p>
-
-<p class='c024'>The petition of the “overseer of the poore of the parishe of East
-Quantoxhead ... that one Richard Kamplyn late of Kilve with his wife
-and three small children are late come as Inmates into the Parish of
-East Quantoxhead which may hereafter become very burdensome and
-chargeable to the said parish if tymley prevention bee not taken
-therein.” (<i>Ibid.</i>, Vol. III, p. 9, 1646.)</p>
-
-<p class='c024'>“John Tankens, his wife and three children ... had lived twoe yeares
-in Chewstoake undisturbed and from thence came to Chew Magna and there
-took part of a Cottage for their habitation for one yeare ... whereof
-the parishe of Chew Magna taking notice found themselves aggrieved
-thereatt, and brought the same in question both before the next
-Justice of the peace of Chew Magna and att the Leete or Lawday, and
-yett neither the said Tankens, his wife or children, had beene
-actually chardgeable to the said parishe of Chew Magna. This Court in
-that respect thinketh not fitt to disturbe the said Tankens, his wife
-or children duringe the said terme, but doth leave them to thend of
-the same terme to bee settled accordinge by lawe they ought. And
-because the parishioners of Chew Magna haue been for the most parte of
-the tyme since the said Tankens, his wife and Children came to Chew
-Magna complayninge against them, This court doth declare that the
-beinge of them att Chew Magna aforesaid duringe the said terme shall
-not bee interpreted to bee a settlement there.” (<i>Ibid.</i>,
-Vol. III, pp. 94-5, 1649).</p>
-
-<p class='c024'>“Pet. of Richard Cookesley of Ashbrettle shewing that he is married in
-the said parish and the said parish endeavour to haue him removed from
-thence although hee is no way chargeable, this court doth see noe
-cause but that the said Cookesley may remaine att Ashbrittle
-aforesaid; provided that his being there shall not be interpretted to
-bee a settlement of him there.” (<i>Ibid.</i>, Vol. III., p. 248,
-1654).</p>
-
-<p class='c024'>James Hurde a poor labourer stated that for these two years last past
-he had dwelt in the parish of Westernemore “In a house wch he hired
-for his monie” and had taken great pains to maintain himself, his wife
-and two children, wherewith he never yet charged the said parish nor
-hopeth ever to do. And yet the parishioners and churchwardens there,
-do “indeavour” and threaten to turn him out of the parish unless he
-will put in sufficient sureties not to charge the said parish which he
-cannot by reason he is but a poor labourer; he humbly requests that he
-may quietly inhabit in the said parish so long as he doth not charge
-the same, otherwise he and his family are like to perish.
-(<i>Ibid.</i>, Vol. I, p. 94, 1612.)</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f159'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r159'>159</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Hertford Co. Rec.</i>, Vol. I., p. 321, 1681. Letter from Francis
-Leigh to Clerk of Peace.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f160'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r160'>160</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Hist. MSS. Com. Var. Coll.</i>, Vol. I., p. 322. <i>Worcestershire
-Q.S. Rec.</i>, 1661.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f161'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r161'>161</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Somerset Q.S. Rec.</i>, Vol. II., p. 292, 1637-8.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f162'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r162'>162</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Salford Portmote Records</i>, Vol. II., p. 144, 1655.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f163'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r163'>163</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i>, p. 151, 1656.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f164'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r164'>164</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Salford Portmote Rec.</i>, Vol. II., p. 150.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f165'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r165'>165</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Yorks. N.R. Q.S. Rec.</i>, Vol. I., p. 170, 1609.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f166'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r166'>166</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Wilts. Notes and Queries</i>, Vol. VII., p. 281, 1664.
-<i>Churchwarden’s Acct. Book. Steeple Ashton.</i></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f167'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r167'>167</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Guilding, <i>Reading Records</i>, Vol. II., p. 181, 1624.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f168'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r168'>168</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>King (Gregory), <i>Natural and Political Observations and Conclusions</i>, p. 44,
-pp. 48-9.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f169'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r169'>169</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Grasier’s Complaint</i>, p. 60.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f170'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r170'>170</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Nottingham, Records of the Borough of</i>, Vol. IV., pp. 312-5, 1613.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f171'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r171'>171</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Eng. Hist. Rev.</i>, Vol. xiii., p. 522.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f172'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r172'>172</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Lipson, <i>Economic Hist. of England</i>, p. 153.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f173'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r173'>173</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Bacon, <i>Works</i>, Vol. VI., p. 95.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f174'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r174'>174</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Lamond (Eliz.) <i>Discourse of the Common weal</i>, 1581.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f175'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r175'>175</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Grasier’s Complaint</i>, p. 60.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f176'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r176'>176</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Yorks. N.R. Q.S. Rec.</i>, Vol. I., p. 22-3, 1605.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f177'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r177'>177</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Hist. MSS. Com. Var. Coll.</i>, Vol. I., p. 93. <i>Wilts
-Q.S. Rec.</i>, 1621. A similar detailed return was made from the
-Hundred of Wilton in 1691. Many often return ‘omnia bene’
-and the like in brief.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f178'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r178'>178</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Bund (J. W. Willis) <i>Worcestershire Co. Rec.</i>, Vol. I., p. 564, 1634.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f179'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r179'>179</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i> Vol. I., p. 571, 1634.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f180'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r180'>180</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Declaration of the Estate of Clothing</i>, p. 2, 1613.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f181'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r181'>181</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Spinster in the seventeenth century is used in its technical sense and
-refers equally to women who are married, unmarried or widows.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f182'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r182'>182</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Davenant (Inspector-General of Exports and Imports). <i>An account of
-the trade between Greate Britain, France, Holland, Spain, Portugal,
-Italy, Africa, Newfoundland etc., with the importations and
-exportations of all Commodities, particularly of the Woollen
-Manufactures, delivered in his reports made to the Commissioners for
-Publick Accounts.</i> 1715, p. 71. Our general exports for the year
-1699 are valued at £6,788,166, 17<i>s.</i> 6¼d. Whereof the Woollen
-Manufacture for the same year are valued at £2,932,292, 17<i>s.</i> 6½<i>d.</i></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f183'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r183'>183</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Proverb Crossed</i>, p. 8, 1677. See also <i>Case of the Woollen
-Manufacturers of Great Britain</i> which states that they are “the
-subsistance of more than a Million of Poor of both sexes, who are
-employed therein.”</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f184'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r184'>184</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Dunsford. <i>Hist. Tiverton</i>, p. 408.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f185'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r185'>185</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Short Essay upon Trade</i>, p. 18, 1741.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f186'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r186'>186</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>The following estimates were made by different writers: out of 1187
-persons supposed to be employed for one week in making up 1200 lbs.
-weight of wool, 900 are given as spinners. (<i>Weavers True Case</i>,
-p. 42, 1714.)</p>
-
-<p class='c024'>One pack of short wool finds employment for 63 persons for one week,
-viz: 28 men and boys: 35 women and girls who are only expected to do
-the carding and spinning.</p>
-
-<p class='c024'>A similar pack made into stockings would provide work for 82 men and
-102 spinners and if made up for the Spanish trade, a pack of wool
-would employ 52 men and 250 women.</p>
-
-<p class='c024'>(Haynes (John) <i>Great Britain’s Glory</i>, p. 6, p. 8. 1715.)</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f187'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r187'>187</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Leland (John), <i>Itinerary</i>, 1535-1543; Part II, pp. 131-2.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f188'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r188'>188</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Lipson, <i>Econ. Hist. of England</i>, p. 420.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f189'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r189'>189</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>See <i>Weavers’ Act</i>, 1555.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f190'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r190'>190</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Hist. MSS. Com. Var. Coll.</i>, Vol. I., p. 75, <i>Wilts. Q.S.
-Rec.</i>, 1603.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f191'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r191'>191</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>S.P.D.</i>, cxxix, 45, Ap. 10, 1622, <i>Return of the Mayor</i>.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f192'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r192'>192</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Clothier’s Complaint, etc.</i>, p. 7, 1692.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f193'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r193'>193</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Lansdowne, 161, fo. 127, 2nd July, 1599.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f194'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r194'>194</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Bund (J. W. W.), <i>Worcestershire Records</i>, Vol. I., p. 530.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f195'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r195'>195</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Riley, <i>Chronicles of London</i>, p. 142.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f196'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r196'>196</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Tingye, <i>Norwich Records</i>, Vol. II., p. 378.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f197'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r197'>197</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Little Red Book of Bristol</i>, Vol. II., p. 127.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f198'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r198'>198</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Lambert, <i>2000 years of Gild Life</i>, p. 6.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f199'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r199'>199</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Lambert, 2000 <i>Years of Gild Life</i>, p. 210.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f200'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r200'>200</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>S.P.D.</i>, cxxi, 155, 1621.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f201'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r201'>201</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Burton, J. R., <i>Hist. of Kidderminster</i>, p. 175,
-<i>Borough Ordinances</i>, 1650.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f202'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r202'>202</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Somerset Q.S. Rec.</i>, Vol. III., pp. 268-9. 1655.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f203'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r203'>203</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Report of the Commissioners on the condition of the Handloom
-Weavers</i>, 1841. x p. 323, <i>Mr. Chapman’s report</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c024'>“The young weaver just out of his apprenticeship is perhaps as well
-able to earn as he will be at any future period setting aside the
-domestic comforts incidental to the married state, his pecuniary
-condition is in the first instance improved by uniting himself with a
-woman capable of earning perhaps nearly as much as himself, and
-performing for him various offices involving an actual pecuniary
-saving. A married man with an income, the result of the earnings of
-himself and wife of 20<i>s.</i> will enjoy more substantial comfort in every
-way than he alone would enjoy with an income of 15<i>s.</i> a week. This
-alone is an inducement to early marriage. In obedience to this primary
-inducement the weaver almost invariably marries soon after he is out
-of his apprenticeship. But the improvement of comfort which marriage
-brings is of short duration;.... About the tenth year
-the labour of the eldest child becomes available.... Many men have
-depended on their wives &amp; their children to support themselves by
-their own earnings, independent of his wages. The wives and children
-consequently took to the loom, or sought work in the factories; and
-now that there is little or no work in the district, the evil is felt,
-and the husband is obliged to maintain them out of his wages.”</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f204'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r204'>204</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Hist. MSS. Com. Var. Coll.</i>, Vol. I., p. 135, <i>Wilts. Q.S. Rec.</i>, 1657.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f205'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r205'>205</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Report of Commission of Decay of Clothing Trade</i>, 1622, Stowe, 554, fo. 48b.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f206'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r206'>206</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>James (John) <i>Hist. of Worsted</i>, p. 98.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f207'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r207'>207</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Tingye, <i>Norwich</i>, Vol II. xcvii, 1532.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f208'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r208'>208</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>S.P.D.</i> lxxx., 13., Jan. 1615. <i>General Conditions of Wool and
-Cloth Trade.</i></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f209'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r209'>209</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Remarks upon Mr. Webber’s scheme</i>, pp. 21-2, 1741.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f210'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r210'>210</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>S.P.D.</i>, lxxx., 15-16, Jan, 1615.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f211'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r211'>211</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>S.P.D.</i>, ccxliii., 23, July 23, 1633.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f212'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r212'>212</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>S.P.D.</i>, xxxviii., 72, 73, Dec., 1608.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f213'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r213'>213</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Hist. MSS. Com. Var. Coll.</i>, Vol. IV., p. 311.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f214'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r214'>214</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Dyer John., <i>The Fleece</i>, 1757.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f215'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r215'>215</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>S.P.D.</i>, cclxvii., 17, May 2, 1634. Certificate from Anthony
-Wither, Commissioner of reformation of clothing.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f216'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r216'>216</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>S.P.D.</i>, ccclxiv., 122, July, 1637.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f217'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r217'>217</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Somerset Q.S. Rec.</i>, Vol. III., p. 56, 1648. <i>Complaint ... by
-... Thos Chambers, Randall Carde, Dorothy Palmer, Stephen Hodges and
-Wm. Hurman, persons ymployed by Henry Denmeade servant to Mr. Thos.
-Cooke, Clothier for the spinning of certen wool and convertinge it
-into yarne and twistinge it thereof for the benefitt of the said Mr.
-Cooke that theire wages for the same spinninge and twistinge had been
-deteyned from them by the said Mr. Cooke ... it is ordered that
-the said Mr. C. doe forthwith pay to the said Thos. Chambers the some
-of ffowerteene shillings to the said Randall Carde the some of nyne
-shillings and fower pence, to the said Dorothy Palmer the some of
-eighteen shillings and one penny to the said Stephen Hodges the some
-of nyne shillings and four pence and to the said Wm. Hurman the some
-of nyne shillings.</i></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f218'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r218'>218</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Scheme to prevent the running of Irish wools to France</i>, p. 19.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f219'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r219'>219</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>(<i>Howard Household Book</i>, p. 63, 1613.) “Widow Grame for spinning
-ij stone and 5ˡ of wooll vjs. To the wench that brought it iiji<i>d.</i> To
-Ellen for winding yarn iij weekes xviiji<i>d.</i>”</p>
-
-<p class='c024'>(Fell, Sarah; <i>Household Accounts</i>, Nov. 28, 1677, p. 439.) “Pd.
-Agnes Holme of Hawxhead foʳ spininge woole here 7 weeks 02.04.”</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f220'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r220'>220</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Haynes, <i>Great Britain’s Glory</i>, pp. 8, 9.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f221'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r221'>221</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Weavers’ True Case</i>, p. 43, 1719.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f222'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r222'>222</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>James, John, <i>Hist. of the Worsted Manufacture</i>, p. 239.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f223'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r223'>223</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Further considerations for encouraging the Woollen Manufactures.</i></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f224'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r224'>224</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Second Humble Address from the Poor Weavers.</i></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f225'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r225'>225</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Evelyn (John) <i>Diary</i>, Vol. III., p. 7, 1685.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f226'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r226'>226</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Defoe, <i>Behaviour</i>, p. 83.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f227'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r227'>227</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Defoe, <i>Behaviour</i>, pp. 84-5.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f228'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r228'>228</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i> p. 88.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f229'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r229'>229</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Acc. of several Workhouses</i>, p. 59, 1725.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f230'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r230'>230</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>S.P.D.</i>, civ. 97, 1618. <i>Petition for regulation.</i></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f231'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r231'>231</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>S.P.D.</i>, cxxx., 65, May 13, 1662.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f232'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r232'>232</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Hist. MSS. Com. Var. Coll.</i>, Vol. I., p. 94, <i>Wilts. Q.S.
-Rec.</i>, 1623.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f233'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r233'>233</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Council Register</i>, 2nd March, 1631-2.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f234'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r234'>234</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Davies (J. S.) <i>Southampton</i>, p. 272.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f235'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r235'>235</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>A report to the council from the High Sheriff of Somerset says: “Yet I
-thincke it my duty to acquaynt your Lordshipps that there are such a
-multytude of poore cottages builte upon the highwaies and odd corners
-in every countrie parishe within this countye, and soe stufte with
-poore people that in many of those parishes there are three or fower
-hundred poore of men and women and children that did gett most of
-their lyvinge by spinnyng, carding and such imployments aboute wooll
-and cloath. And the deadness of that trade and want of money is such
-that they are for the most parte without worke, and knowe not how to
-live. This <i>is</i> a great grievance amongst us and tendeth much to
-mutinye.”</p>
-
-<p class='c024'>(<i>S.P.D.</i>, cxxx., 73, May 14, 1622, High Sheriff of
-Somersetshire to the Council.)</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f236'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r236'>236</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Second Humble Address from the poor Weavers.</i></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f237'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r237'>237</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>The Council ordered the Justices of the Peace for the counties of
-Wilts, Somerset, Dorset, Devon, Gloucester,
-Worcester, Oxford, Kent and Suffolk, to summon clothiers and “deale
-effectually with them for the employment of such weavers, spinners and
-other persons, as are now out of work.... We may not indure that the
-cloathiers ... should att their pleasure, and without giving knowledge
-thereof unto this Boarde, dismisse their workefolkes, who being many
-in number and most of them of the poorer sort are in such cases likely
-by their clamour to disturb the quiet and government of those partes
-wherein they live.” (<i>C.R.</i>, 9th Feb., 1621-2.)</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f238'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r238'>238</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>S.P.D.</i>, cxxvii., 102, Feb. 16, 1622.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f239'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r239'>239</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>S.P.D.</i>, cxxviii, 49, March 13, 1622.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f240'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r240'>240</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>S.P.D.</i>, cxxxi., 4, June 1, 1622.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f241'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r241'>241</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Guilding, <i>Reading</i>, Vol. II., p. 159, 1623.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f242'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r242'>242</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i>, Vol. III., p. 7, Mar. 3, 1629-30.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f243'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r243'>243</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>S.P.D.</i>, xcvii., 85, May 25, 1618. J.P.s of Devonshire to Council.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f244'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r244'>244</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i>, cxv., 20, May 11, 1620. J.P.s of Wiltshire to Council.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f245'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r245'>245</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>S.P.D.</i>, ccxliv., 1, Aug. 1, 1633.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f246'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r246'>246</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>S.P.D.</i>, clxxxix., 40, Ap. 27, 1631. J.P.s of Essex to Council.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f247'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r247'>247</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>S.P.D.</i>, cxcvii., 72, July, 1631. Affidavit about Saymakers in
-County of Suffolk.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f248'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r248'>248</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Fiennes (Celia) p. 74. <i>Through England on a Side-saddle.</i></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f249'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r249'>249</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Suss. Arch. Coll.</i>, Vol. II., p. 121. <i>Extracts from the Diary
-of Richard Stapley, Gent.</i>, 1682-1724.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f250'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r250'>250</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Fell (Sarah) <i>Household Accts.</i>, p. 233.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f251'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r251'>251</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Case of British and Irish Manufacture of Linnen.</i></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f252'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r252'>252</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Case of the Linen Drapers.</i></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f253'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r253'>253</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Linnen and Woollen Manufactory, p. 4-8, 1691.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f254'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r254'>254</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>True case of the Scots Linen Manufacture.</i></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f255'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r255'>255</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Heywood (Rev. Oliver) <i>Autobiography</i>, Vol. I., p. 36.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f256'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r256'>256</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ante, p. 48.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f257'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r257'>257</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>S.P.D.</i>, cccclvii., 3., June 13, 1640.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f258'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r258'>258</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i>, pp. 259-60, 1649.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f259'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r259'>259</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Nottingham Records</i>, Vol. V., pp. 174-5, 1636.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f260'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r260'>260</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Stow, <i>London</i>, Book VI., p. 60.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f261'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r261'>261</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Poor Out-cast Children’s Song and Cry.</i></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f262'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r262'>262</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Suss. Arch. Coll.</i>, Vol. xx., pp. 99-100, <i>Acct. Book of Cowdon</i>.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f263'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r263'>263</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Dunning, <i>Plain and Easie Method</i>, p. 8, 1686.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f264'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r264'>264</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Guilding, <i>Reading</i>, Vol. II., p. 294.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f265'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r265'>265</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Mayo (C.H.) <i>Municipal Records of Dorchester</i>, p. 667, 1635.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f266'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r266'>266</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>To burl, “to dress cloth as fullers do.”</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f267'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r267'>267</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Mayo (C. H.), <i>Municipal Records of Dorchester</i>, p. 515, 1638.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f268'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r268'>268</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i> p. 521.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f269'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r269'>269</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i> pp. 517-8.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f270'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r270'>270</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Trade of England</i>, p. 10, 1681.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f271'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r271'>271</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Tingey, <i>Norwich</i>, Vol. II., p. 355.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f272'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r272'>272</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Latimer, <i>Annals of Bristol</i>, p. 249.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f273'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r273'>273</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Cary, (John) <i>Proceedings of Corporation of Bristol</i>, p. 13, 1700.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f274'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r274'>274</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Firmin, <i>Some Proposals</i>, p. 19, 1678.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f275'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r275'>275</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Firmin, Thomas, <i>Life</i>, pp. 31-32, 1698.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f276'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r276'>276</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i> pp. 31-2, 1698.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f277'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r277'>277</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Firmin (Thomas) <i>Life</i>, pp. 33-6.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f278'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r278'>278</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i> pp. 39-40.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f279'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r279'>279</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Rolls of Parliament</i>, V., 325. <i>A Petition of Silk
-Weavers</i>, 34 Henry VI., c. 55.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f280'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r280'>280</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Statutes</i>, II., p. 374, 33 Henry VI., c. 5.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f281'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r281'>281</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>By kind permission of Miss Eileen Power.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f282'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r282'>282</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>S.P.D.</i>, xxvi., 6. Jan. 1607.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f283'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r283'>283</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>S.P.D.</i>, clxxv., 102, Nov. 25, 1630.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f284'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r284'>284</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Humble Petition of the Master, Wardens and Assistants of the
-Company of Silk Throwers.</i></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f285'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r285'>285</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Statutes 13 and 14, Charles II., c. 15.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f286'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r286'>286</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Trade of England</i>, p. 18.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f287'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r287'>287</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Answer to a Paper of Reflections, on the Project for laying a Duty
-on English Wrought Silks.</i></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f288'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r288'>288</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Case of the Manufacturers of Gilt and Silver Wire</i>, 1714.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f289'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r289'>289</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>C.R.</i>, June 16, 1624.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f290'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r290'>290</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>S.P.D.</i>, ccclix., Returns to Council ... of houses, etc., 1637.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f291'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r291'>291</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Case of the Parish of St. Giles, Cripplegate.</i></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f292'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r292'>292</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Reasons for a Limited Exportation of Wooll</i>, 1677.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f293'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r293'>293</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Liber Albus</i>, pp. 181-2. 1419.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f294'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r294'>294</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Lyon. <i>Dover</i>, Vol. II., p. 295.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f295'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r295'>295</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Lyon, <i>Dover</i>, Vol. II., p. 359.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f296'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r296'>296</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ferguson, <i>Carlisle</i>, p. 79; from <i>Dormont Book</i>.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f297'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r297'>297</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Irish Friend</i>, Vol. IV., p. 150.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f298'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r298'>298</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>By kind permission of Miss Eileen Power.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f299'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r299'>299</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Harl. MSS., 2054. fo. 22., <i>The Smiths Book of Accts.</i> Chester, 1574.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f300'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r300'>300</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Defoe, <i>Everybody’s Business is No-Body’s Business</i>, p. 6, 1725.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f301'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r301'>301</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Defoe, <i>Behaviour of Servants</i>, p. 12, 1724.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f302'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r302'>302</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Smith (Toulmin), <i>English Gilds</i>, p. 180.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f303'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r303'>303</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Riley (H. T.), <i>Memorials of London</i>, p. 365.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f304'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r304'>304</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Arber, <i>Stationers</i>, Vol. III., Intro., p. 19.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f305'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r305'>305</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Decker (Thos.), <i>Best Plays</i>, p. 29.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f306'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r306'>306</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i> p. 108.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f307'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r307'>307</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Arber, <i>Stationers</i>, Vol. V., Intro. xxix-xxx.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f308'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r308'>308</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>S.P.D.</i>, cccxiv., 127., Feb. 1636.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f309'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r309'>309</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i> clxxv., 45., Nov. 12, 1630.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f310'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r310'>310</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Arber, <i>Transcript</i>, Vol. III., add, 701.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f311'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r311'>311</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Stopes (Mrs. C. C.) <i>Shakespeare’s Warwickshire Contemporaries</i>, p. 7.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f312'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r312'>312</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i>, p. 8. (Some authorities state that Field
-married the widow, others the daughter of Vautrollier.)</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f313'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r313'>313</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Arber, <i>Transcript</i>, Vol. III., p. 39.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f314'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r314'>314</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Arber, <i>Transcript</i>, Vol. V., lviii.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f315'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r315'>315</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>S.P.D.</i>, cccxxxix., p. 89.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f316'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r316'>316</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>e.g. <i>An Essay of Drapery</i> ... by William Scott, printed by Eliz.
-Alde for S. Pennell, London, 1635. Calvin, <i>Institution of Christian
-Religion</i>. Printed by the widowe of R. Wolfe, London, 1574. The
-fourthe edition of <i>Porta Linguarum</i> is printed by E. Griffin for
-M. Sparke. London, 1639.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f317'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r317'>317</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Arber, <i>Transcript</i>, Vol. IV., p. 534.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f318'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r318'>318</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i> Vol. I., p. 16.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f319'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r319'>319</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>S.P.D.</i>, ccci., 105, Nov. 16, 1635.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f320'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r320'>320</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Arber, <i>Transcript</i>, Vol. V., p. lxxxi-cxi.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f321'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r321'>321</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i>, Vol. V., p. lxiii.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f322'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r322'>322</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Arber, <i>Transcript</i>, Vol. V., p. lv.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f323'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r323'>323</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Monthly Meeting Minutes. Horsleydown, 13 iᵐᵒ 167⅞.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f324'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r324'>324</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Pepys, <i>Diary</i>, Vol. I., p. 26.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f325'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r325'>325</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Smyth’s <i>Obituary</i>, P. 77.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f326'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r326'>326</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Howard, <i>Household Books</i>, p.161, 1622.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f327'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r327'>327</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Foulis, Sir John, <i>Acct. Book</i>, p. 22, 1680.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f328'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r328'>328</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>“Mistres Gosson. Stephan Coxe, Sworne and Admytted a Freeman of this
-Companie iijs, iiiji<i>d.</i> Note that master Warden White Dothe Reporte, for
-mistres Gosson’s Consent to the makinge of this prentice free.
-(Arbers, <i>Transcript</i>, Vol. II., p. 727, 1600.) Alice Gosson Late
-wyfe of Thomas Gosson. Henry Gosson sworne and admitted A ffreeman of
-this company per patrimonium iijs. iiiji<i>d.</i> (<i>Ibid.</i> p. 730, 1601.)
-Mistres Woolff. John Barnes sworne and admitted A freeman
-(<i>Ibid.</i> p. 730, 1601.) Jane proctor, Wydowe of William proctor.
-Humfrey Lympenny sworne and admitted A ffreeman of this Companye iijs.
-iiijd, (<i>Ibid.</i> p. 730, 1601.) Mystris Conneway
-Nicholas Davyes sworn and admitted A freeman of this company per
-patrimonium iijs. iiiji<i>d.</i> (<i>Ibid.</i> p. 732, 1602.)”</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f329'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r329'>329</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Johne Adams of London (stationer’s son) apprenticed to Alice Woolff of
-citie of London widowe for 8 years 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> (Arber, <i>Transcript</i>,
-Vol. II., p. 253, 1601.) Other instances of apprentices being bound to
-women occur as for example “Wm. Walle apprenticed to Elizabeth Hawes
-Widow for 8 years,” (<i>Ibid.</i>, Vol. II., p. 287, 1604.) “Thomas
-Richardson of York apprenticed to Alice Gosson, of citie of London
-wydowe for 7 years, 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>” (<i>Ibid.</i>, Vol. II., p. 249, 1600).</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f330'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r330'>330</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i>, p. 260, 1602.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f331'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r331'>331</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i>, p. 262, 1602.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f332'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r332'>332</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Arber <i>Transcript</i>, Vol. V., p. 11, 1560.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f333'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r333'>333</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Records of the Worshipful Company of Carpenters</i>, Vol. II.,
-Intro., p. ix.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f334'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r334'>334</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>For example “Itm payd to the bedells wyffe for kepyng of the gardyn
-vijs.” <i>Ibid.</i> Vol. IV., p. 2. <i>Warden’s Acct. Book</i>, 1546.
-She had besides iiijs. “for her hole yeres wasschyng the clothes” (p.
-11) and iiiji<i>d.</i> “for skoryng of the vessell,” (p. 13) this payment was
-later increased to xiji<i>d.</i> and she had “for bromes for Oʳ Hall every
-quarter a ji<i>d.</i>” (p. 33) in Reward for her attendance ijs, (p. 114).
-Burdons wyffe for dressing your dinner xiiiji<i>d.</i> (p. 129).</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f335'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r335'>335</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Records of the Worshipful Company of Carpenters</i>, Vol. III.,
-<i>Court Book</i>, p. 97.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f336'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r336'>336</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i> p. 103.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f337'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r337'>337</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i> Vol. III., pp. 10-11, March 15, 1544-5. “agreyed and
-codyssendyd thatt frances pope and hys wyffe schall have and hold a
-gardyn plott lyeng be oure hall in the prysche of alhallouns at london
-Wall for the tyme of the longer lever of them bothe payeing viijs: be
-the yere ... the sayd [ ]pope nor hys wyffe schall not take dowene no
-palles nor pale postes nor Raylles In the garden nor no tres nor
-bussches schall nott plucke upe be the Rootes nor cutte theme downe
-nor no maner of erbys ... wᵗowt the lycens of the Master and Wardyns
-of the mystery of Carpenters” Aug. 10, 1564, “agreed and condissendid
-that Robart masckall and Elyzabeth his wiffe shall have and hold the
-Howse which He now occupieth duryng his lyffe and after the deseese of
-the said Robart to Remayne to Elizabeth his wyffe duryng her wyddohed
-paying yerlye xls of lawfull mony of England” etc., <i>Ibid.</i> Vol.
-III., p. 78.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f338'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r338'>338</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Records of Worshipful Company of Carpenters</i>, Vol. III., p. 58.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f339'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r339'>339</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i> Vol. IV., p. 99, <i>Wardens Acct. Book</i>, 1558.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f340'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r340'>340</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>In 1563 xxs. was “Resd of Wyllym barnewell at yᵉ buryall of his wiffe
-yᵗ she dyd wyll to be gyven to yᵉ Cōpany.” (<i>Ibid.</i> Vol. IV., p.
-147) “Payd at the buryall of barnewell’s wyffe at yᵉ kyges hedd.
-xiiijs. iiiji<i>d.</i> Paid to the bedle for Redyng of yᵉ wyll viiji<i>d.</i>”
-(<i>Ibid.</i> Vol. IV., p. 149.)</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f341'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r341'>341</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i> Vol. IV., p. 84.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f342'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r342'>342</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Records of Worshipful Company of Carpenters</i>, Vol. III., p. 15,
-<i>Court Book</i>.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f343'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r343'>343</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i> Vol. III., p. 30.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f344'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r344'>344</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i> Vol. III., p. 31.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f345'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r345'>345</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i> Vol. I., p. 136.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f346'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r346'>346</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Records of the Worshipful Company of Carpenters</i>, Vol. I.,
-Intro. vii-viii.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f347'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r347'>347</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i> p. 137, May 2, 1671. Richardus Read filius Thome Read de
-Chart Magna in Com. Kanc. Shoemaker po: se appren Josepho Hutchinson
-Bedello Hujus Societat pro Septem Ann a die dat Indre Dat die et ann
-ult pred (Assign immediate Susanne Catlin vid nuper uxor. Johannis
-Catlin nuper Civis et Carpenter London defunct uten etc).</p>
-
-<p class='c024'><i>Ibid.</i> p. 153. Dec. 5, 1676. Johannes Keyes filius Willi. Keyes
-nuper de Hampsted in Com. Middx. Milwright ed Elizabetham Davis vid.
-willi Davis nuper Civi &amp; Carpentar de London a die date pred etc
-(sic).</p>
-
-<p class='c024'><i>Ibid.</i> p. 158. July 1, 1679. Samuell Goodfellow filius Johanni
-of Rowell in Com. Northton Corwayner pon se Martha Wildey relict of
-Robert pro septem annis a dat etc.</p>
-
-<p class='c024'><i>Ibid.</i> p. 161. Ap. 5, 1681. Georg Thomas filius Thome nuper de
-Carlyon in Com Monmouth gent pon se Apprenticum Elizabeth Whitehorne
-of Aldermanbury vid. Johis. pro septem Annis a dat.</p>
-
-<p class='c024'><i>Ibid.</i> p. 164. Oct. 4, 1681. Richard Lynn sonn of William Lynn
-decd. pon se Apprenticum Marie Lynn widdow Relict of the said William
-C: C: pro septem annis a dat.</p>
-
-<p class='c024'><i>Ibid.</i> p. 165. March 7, 1681-2. John Whitehorne son of John
-Whitehorne C: C: Ld, pon se apprenticum Elizabethe Relict. ejusdem
-Joh’s Whitehorne pro septem annis a dat.</p>
-
-<p class='c024'><i>Ibid.</i> p. 171. Apr. 5, 1686. Richard Sᵗevenson sonne of
-Robᵗ Stevenson late of Dublin in the Kingedome of Ireland Pavier bound
-to Anne Nicholson Widowe the Relict of Anthony Nicholson, for eight
-yeares.</p>
-
-<p class='c024'><i>Ibid.</i> p. 189. June 7, 1692. Robert Harper sonne of William
-Harper of Notchford in the county of Chesheire, bound to Abigail
-Taylor for Seaven Yeares.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f348'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r348'>348</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Records of Worshipful Company of Carpenters</i>, Vol. III., p. 102,
-<i>Court Book</i>, 1567.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f349'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r349'>349</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i> Vol. III., p. 200.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f350'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r350'>350</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i> Vol. I., Intro. p. x-xi. Apprentice Entry Book.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f351'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r351'>351</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i> Vol. I., p. 62.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f352'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r352'>352</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i> Vol. I., p. 125.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f353'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r353'>353</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i> Vol. I., p. 78.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f354'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r354'>354</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i> Vol. I., p. 145.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f355'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r355'>355</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i> Vol. I., p. 136.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f356'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r356'>356</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Records of the Worshipful Company of Carpenters</i>, Vol. I., p.
-65, e.g. Brewin Radford (obligatur Maria Radford de Perpole in Com
-Dorsett vid. in 100ˡ pro ventut apprentice).</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f357'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r357'>357</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i> Vol. I., p. 149, 1674. “Edmundus Wilstead filius Henrici Wilstead de Thetford
-in Com Norfolcie yeoman po: se appren. Samueli Joyse Civi et Carpenter London
-necnon de Exambia Regali London miliner pro septem annis” etc.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f358'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r358'>358</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i> Vol. I., p. 162.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f359'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r359'>359</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i> Vol. I., p. 148.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f360'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r360'>360</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i> Vol. I., p. 156.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f361'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r361'>361</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Jupp, <i>Carpenters</i>, p. 161, 1679.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f362'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r362'>362</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Records of Worshipful Company of Carpenters</i>, Vol. I., p. 198.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f363'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r363'>363</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i> Vol. I., <i>App. Entry Book</i>, p. 159, Feb. 3, 1679.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f364'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r364'>364</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Records of the Worshipful Company of Carpenters</i>, Vol. III., p.
-75, <i>Court Book</i>.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f365'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r365'>365</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Jupp, <i>Carpenters</i>, p. 12.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f366'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r366'>366</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Armourers and Braziers.</i>, <i>Charter and By-laws of the
-Company</i>, p. 4.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f367'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r367'>367</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Clode, <i>History of the Merchant Taylors</i>, London, Vol. I., p. 42.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f368'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r368'>368</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Heath, <i>Acct. of the Worshipful Company of Grocers</i>, p. 53, memo. 1348.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f369'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r369'>369</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Leach, <i>Beverley Town Documents</i>, p. 95, 1582.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f370'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r370'>370</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Welch, <i>History of Pewterers Company</i>, Vol. I., p. 201, 1559.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f371'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r371'>371</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i> Vol. II., p. 47.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f372'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r372'>372</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Welch, <i>Hist. of Pewterers’ Company</i>, Vol. II., p. 145.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f373'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r373'>373</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Lambert, <i>Two Thousand Years of Gild Life</i>, p. 217, 1499.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f374'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r374'>374</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i> p. 229, 1415.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f375'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r375'>375</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Harl. MSS., 2054, fo. 5. <i>Charter of the Joiner’s Co.</i></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f376'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r376'>376</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Fox (F. F.) <i>Merchant Taylors, Bristol</i>, p. 31.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f377'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r377'>377</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i> p. 26-9.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f378'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r378'>378</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Leach, <i>Beverley Town Documents</i>, p. 78, 1494.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f379'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r379'>379</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Welch, Charles, <i>Hist. of Pewterers Company</i>, Vol. I., p. 200, 1558.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f380'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r380'>380</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Armourers and Brasiers, Charter and Bye laws of Company of.</i>, p.
-5. See also Johnson, <i>Ordinances of the Drapers of London</i>, Vol.
-I., p. 280, 1524).</p>
-
-<p class='c024'>“(it shall not be lawful unto any brother or sister freed in this
-fellyship to take mo. apprentices than may stand in good order for
-their degree) ... every brother being in the master’s livery shall pay
-6<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i> and every sister whose husband has been of the aforesaid
-livery shall pay for every apprentice 6<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i> and every other brother
-or sister not being of the master’s livery shall pay for every
-apprentice 3<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i>”</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f381'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r381'>381</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Hoare, Sir R. C., <i>Hist. of Modern Wilts</i>, Vol. VI., p. 340.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f382'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r382'>382</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i> Vol. VI., p. 343.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f383'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r383'>383</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ferguson, <i>Carlisle</i>, p. 212, <i>Glover’s Gild</i>, 1665.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f384'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r384'>384</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Black, W. H., <i>Articles of the Leathersellers</i>, p. 21, 1398.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f385'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r385'>385</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Smythe, W. D., <i>Hist. of Worshipful Co. of Girdlers, London</i>, p. 63.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f386'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r386'>386</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Fox, F. F., <i>Merchant Taylors, Bristol</i>, pp. 64-65.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f387'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r387'>387</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Somerset Quarter Sessions Records</i>, Vol. III., p. 165, 1652.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f388'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r388'>388</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Mayo, G. H., <i>Municipal Records, Dorchester</i>, p. 466.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f389'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r389'>389</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Rec. of Worshipful Co. of Carpenters</i>, Vol. IV., p. 56,
-<i>Warden’s Acct. Book</i>, 1556.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f390'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r390'>390</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i> Vol. IV., p. 86.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f391'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r391'>391</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i> Vol. IV., p. 88.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f392'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r392'>392</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i> Vol. IV., p. 101.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f393'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r393'>393</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Welch, <i>Hist. of Pewterers’ Company</i>, Vol. I., pp. 180-181.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f394'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r394'>394</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Overall, <i>Company of Clockmakers</i>, London, p. 43, 1632.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f395'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r395'>395</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ramsay, Wm., <i>Hist. of the Glass-Sellers</i>, p. 125.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f396'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r396'>396</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Leader, <i>Hist. of Company of Cutlers</i>, Vol. I., p. 47, 1696.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f397'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r397'>397</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Leader, <i>Records of the Burgery of Sheffield</i>, p. 227, 1685.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f398'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r398'>398</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Welch, <i>Hist. of Pewterers’ Company</i>, Vol. II., p. 153.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f399'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r399'>399</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Stow, <i>London</i>, Book V., p. 335.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f400'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r400'>400</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Middlesex Sessions Book</i>, p. 47, 1691.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f401'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r401'>401</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Guilding, <i>Reading Records</i>, Vol. II., p. 362.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f402'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r402'>402</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Smythe, <i>Company of Girdlers</i>, p. 133, 1635.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f403'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r403'>403</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i> p. 87, 1627.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f404'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r404'>404</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Somerset Q.S. Rec.</i>, Vol. III., pp. 365-6, 1659.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f405'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r405'>405</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Guilding, <i>Reading Records</i>, Vol. III., p. 502, 1640.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f406'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r406'>406</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Horsleydown Monthly Meeting Minute Book</i>, 19 11mo., 1675.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f407'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r407'>407</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>S.P.D.</i>, ccccxxxv. 42, Dec. 6, 1639.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f408'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r408'>408</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Welch, <i>Pewterers</i>, Vol. II., p. 92, 1633-4.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f409'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r409'>409</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Smythe, <i>Company of Girdlers</i>, p. 128, 1747.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f410'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r410'>410</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i> p. 88, 1628.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f411'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r411'>411</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Latimer, <i>Annals of Bristol</i>, p. 26, 1606.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f412'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r412'>412</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Humble Petition and Case of the Tobacco Pipe Makers of the Citys of London and
-Westminster, 1695.</i></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f413'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r413'>413</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Reasons humbly offered by the Leather-Dressers and Glovers, &amp;c.</i></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f414'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r414'>414</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Case or Petition of the Corporation of Pin-makers.</i></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f415'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r415'>415</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Mournfull Cryes of many Thousand Poore Tradesmen</i>, 1647.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f416'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r416'>416</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Humble Petition of many thousands of Courtiers, Citizens, Gentlemens and
-Tradesmens Wives, &amp;c.</i></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f417'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r417'>417</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ante, p. 175.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f418'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r418'>418</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Eileen Power, by kind permission, 1419.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f419'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r419'>419</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>C.S.P.D.</i> cv. 53, Jan. 19, 1619.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f420'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r420'>420</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Cellier (Mrs.) <i>Malice Defeated</i>., p. 25.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f421'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r421'>421</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Suss. Arch. Coll.</i>, Vol. I., p. 123, <i>Journal Rev.</i>, 1676.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f422'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r422'>422</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Monthly Meeting Minute Book, Peele</i>, Nov. 24, 1687.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f423'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r423'>423</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Davies. (J. S.) <i>Hist. of Southampton</i>, p. 279.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f424'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r424'>424</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Congreve (Wm.). <i>The Old Batchelor</i>, Act iv., Sc. viii.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f425'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r425'>425</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Chalkley, <i>Journal</i>, pp. 30-31, 1690.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f426'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r426'>426</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Bownas, Samuel, <i>Life of</i>, p. 135.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f427'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r427'>427</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Mayo, <i>Municipal Records of Dorchester</i>, p. 428-9.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f428'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r428'>428</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>The Churchwardens of St. Margaret’s, Westminster, paid 6<i>d.</i> to
-“Goodwyfe Wells for salt to destroy the fleas in the Churchwarden’s
-pew.” (Cox. <i>Churchwardens Accts.</i>, p. 321, 1610.). Among
-the Cromwell family receipts is one in 1624 “from ye Right worᵉ ye
-Lady Carr by the hands of Henry Hanby, the somme of twenty and one
-pounds in full payment of all Reckonings from the beginninge of the
-world ... by me ellen Sadler X” (<i>Cromwell Family Bills and
-Receipts</i>, p. 15.) “A bill for Mrs. Willie of Ramsie the 14
-of April 1636</p>
-<div class='lg-container-l c020'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>for material and making your daughter petecoat</div>
- <div class='line'>for material and making your silk grogram coate</div>
- <div class='line'>for material and making your daughter’s gasson shute</div>
- <div class='line'>for material and making your daughter’s silke moheare wascote</div>
- <div class='line'>for material and making your damask coate</div>
- <div class='line in20'>Total 7. 17. 9.” (<i>Ibid.</i> p. 265).</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c024'>The Rev. Giles Moore bought “of Widdow Langley 2 more fine sheets, of
-Goodwyfe Seamer 9 ells. and a halfe of hempen cloath.” (<i>Suss. Arch.
-Coll.</i> Vol. I., p. 68, 1656. Rev. Giles Moore’s Journal).</p>
-
-<p class='c024'>Foulis paid, in Scots money, Jan. 22, 1692 “to Mrs. Pouries lad for
-aniseed, carthamums &amp;c. 11<i>s.</i>” (p. 144), and on Aug. 3, 1696 he
-“received from Eliz. Ludgate last Whits maill for yᵉ shop at fosters
-Wyndhead 25ˡⁱᵇ.” (p. 195). Jan. 14, 1704 “to my douchter Jean be Mrs.
-Cuthbertsons paymᵗ for 4 ell &amp; ½ flowered calico to lyne my nightgowne
-7. 13. 0.” (p. 339). May 23, 1704 “receaved from Agnes philp Whitsun,
-maill for the shop at fosters wyndhead and yᵉ key therof, and given it
-to the Candlemakers wife who has taken the shop 25ˡⁱᵇ” (p. 346).
-(Foulis <i>Acct. Book</i>). Similar entries are in the <i>Howard
-Household Book</i>, 1619. “To Mrs. Smith for lining [linen] for my
-Lord, had in Easter tearm, 5ˡⁱ xˢ. Mrs. Smith for napry had in May
-vjˡⁱ iiˢ” (<i>Howard Household Book</i>, <i>pp.</i> 105 and 161.).</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f429'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r429'>429</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Middlesex County Records</i>, p. 180, 1698.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f430'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r430'>430</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Middlesex County Records</i>, p. 2, 1690.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f431'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r431'>431</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>C. R.</i> 18th, August, 1640.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f432'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r432'>432</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Nottingham Records</i>, Vol. V., p. 331, 1686.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f433'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r433'>433</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ferguson, <i>Municipal Records, Carlisle</i>, p. 110, 1651.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f434'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r434'>434</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i> p. 112, 1668.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f435'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r435'>435</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i> p. 115, 1719.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f436'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r436'>436</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Act of Common Council for reformation, etc.</i></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f437'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r437'>437</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Gibbs, <i>Corporation Records of St. Albans</i>, p. 62, 1613.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f438'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r438'>438</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ferguson, <i>Carlisle</i>, p. 187, 1669.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f439'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r439'>439</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Stuff for Aprons.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f440'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r440'>440</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Guilding. <i>Reading Records</i>, Vol. II., p. 171, 1624.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f441'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r441'>441</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i> Vol. II., p. 240, 1625.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f442'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r442'>442</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i> Vol. II., p. 252.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f443'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r443'>443</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Guilding, Reading Records</i>, Vol. II., p. 267.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f444'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r444'>444</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Brief State of the Inland and Home Trade.</i>, pp. 59 and 63, 1730.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f445'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r445'>445</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Somerset Q.S. Records</i>, Vol. II., p. 119, 1630.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f446'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r446'>446</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i> Vol. II., p. 153, 1631.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f447'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r447'>447</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i> Vol. II., p. 161.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f448'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r448'>448</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i> Vol. II., p. 165.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f449'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r449'>449</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Somerset Q.S. Records</i>, Vol. II., p. 223.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f450'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r450'>450</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ante</i>, p. 33.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f451'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r451'>451</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Trade of England</i>, p. 21, 1681.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f452'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r452'>452</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Hertfordshire County Records</i>, Vol. I., pp. 347-8.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f453'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r453'>453</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Linnen and Woollen Manufactury</i>, p. 7, 1681.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f454'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r454'>454</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Gower, <i>Le mirour de l’omme</i> (trans. from French verse by Eileen Power).</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f455'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r455'>455</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Stow, <i>London</i>, Book V., p. 343. Assize of Bread.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f456'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r456'>456</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Manchester Court Leet Records</i>, Vol. IV., p. 110, 1653.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f457'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r457'>457</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i> p. 212, 1657.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f458'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r458'>458</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i> p. 244, 1658.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f459'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r459'>459</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Manchester Court Test Records</i>, p. 243, 1658.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f460'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r460'>460</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Petronilla, Countess of Leicester, granted to Petronilla, daughter of Richard
-Roger’s son of Leicester and her heirs “all the suit of the men outside the
-Southgate aforesaid to bake at her bakehouse with all the liberties and free customs,
-saving my customary tenants who are bound to my bakehouses within the town of
-Leicester,” Bateson, (M.) <i>Records, Leicester</i>, Vol. I.; p. 10.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f461'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r461'>461</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Harl. MSS.</i>, 2054, fo. 44 and 45, 2105, fo. 301.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f462'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r462'>462</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ferguson, <i>Carlisle, Dormont Book</i>, p. 69, 1561.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f463'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r463'>463</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Beverley Town Documents</i>, pp. 39-40.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f464'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r464'>464</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Powell, <i>Assize of Bread</i>, 1600.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f465'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r465'>465</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Records of Worshipful Company of Carpenters</i>, Vol. IV., p. 69, 1554.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f466'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r466'>466</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Salford Portmote Records</i>, Vol. II., p. 188.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f467'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r467'>467</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>S.P.D.</i> cxxxiv., 36. November 27, 1622.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f468'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r468'>468</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Lambert, <i>Two Thousand Years of Gild Life</i>, p. 307. <i>Composicion of Bakers,
-Hull.</i>, 1598.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f469'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r469'>469</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Guilding, <i>Reading Records</i>, Vol. II., p. 181.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f470'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r470'>470</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Hoare, (Sir. R. C.). <i>Hist. of Wiltshire</i>, Vol. VI., p. 342.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f471'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r471'>471</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Manchester Court Leet Records</i>, Vol. IV., p. 31.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f472'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r472'>472</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i> p. 47.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f473'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r473'>473</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i> p. 51.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f474'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r474'>474</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Manchester Court Leet Records</i>, p. 70.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f475'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r475'>475</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Atkinson, (J. C.), <i>Yorks. N. R. Q.S. Records</i>, Vol. I., p. 81. July 8, 1607.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f476'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r476'>476</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Hertford Co. Records</i>, Vol. I, p. 32, 1600.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f477'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r477'>477</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Hertford County Records</i>, Vol. I., p. 365, 1686.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f478'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r478'>478</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ferguson, <i>Carlisle</i>, p. 278. April 21, 1619.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f479'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r479'>479</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>J. C. Atkinson, <i>Yorks. N. R. Q.S. Records</i>, Vol. II., p. 8, 1612.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f480'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r480'>480</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Hertford County Records</i>, Vol. II., p. 25, 1698.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f481'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r481'>481</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Brewster, <i>Stockton-on-Tees</i>, p. 42.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f482'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r482'>482</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Statutes 27, Henry VIII., c. 9.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f483'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r483'>483</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Guilding, <i>Reading Records</i>, Vol. IV., p. 122.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f484'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r484'>484</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Nottingham Records</i>, Vol. V., p. 284, 1654.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f485'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r485'>485</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Harl. MSS.</i>, 2105 fo., 300 b., 1565.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f486'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r486'>486</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>S.P.D.</i> cxix. 107., February 24, 1621.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f487'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r487'>487</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Act for the Settlement and well Ordering of the Several Publick Markets within the
-City of London</i>, 1674.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f488'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r488'>488</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Mayo, <i>Municipal Records of Dorchester</i>, p. 428, 1698.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f489'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r489'>489</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>S.P.D.</i> 1. clxxxviii., James I., undated.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f490'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r490'>490</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Manchester Court Leet Records</i>, Vol. V., p. 236, 1674.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f491'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r491'>491</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i> p. 221, 1674.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f492'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r492'>492</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Manchester Court Leet Records</i>, Vol. IV., p. 31.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f493'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r493'>493</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i> p. 40.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f494'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r494'>494</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Manchester Court Leet Records</i>, Vol. IV., p. 68.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f495'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r495'>495</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i> p. 15, 1648.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f496'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r496'>496</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Tingey, J. C., <i>Records of the City of Norwich</i>, Vol. II., p. 337.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f497'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r497'>497</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ante., p. 36.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f498'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r498'>498</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Atkinson, J. C. <i>Yorks. N. R. Q.S. Records</i>, Vol. I., p. 121, 1698.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f499'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r499'>499</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Herbert, <i>Livery Companies of London</i>, Vol. II., p. 44.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f500'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r500'>500</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i> Vol. II., p. 35.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f501'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r501'>501</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Middlesex County Records</i>, p. 160, 1696.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f502'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r502'>502</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>A Project for Mounts of Piety, Lansdowne MSS.</i>, 351 fo., 18b.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f503'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r503'>503</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Manchester Court Leet Records</i>, Vol. IV., p. 112, 1654.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f504'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r504'>504</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Beverley Town Documents</i>, p. 41.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f505'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r505'>505</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i> p. 41.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f506'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r506'>506</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i> p. lv.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f507'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r507'>507</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Bateson, (M.), <i>Borough Customs</i>, Vol. I., p. 185.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f508'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r508'>508</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i> Vol. I., p. 185, 1345.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f509'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r509'>509</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Bateson, (M.), <i>Records of Leicester</i>, Vol. II., p. 21.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f510'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r510'>510</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Bateson, (M.), <i>Records of Leicester</i>, Vol. III., p. 33.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f511'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r511'>511</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i> Vol. III., p. 153.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f512'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r512'>512</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Powell, John. <i>The Assize of Bread.</i></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f513'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r513'>513</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Considerations Touching the Excise</i>, p. 7.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f514'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r514'>514</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Rockley, Francis.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f515'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r515'>515</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>S.P.D.</i>, cxii., 75., February 9, 1620.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f516'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r516'>516</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>C. R.</i> November 9, 1636.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f517'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r517'>517</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>S.P.D.</i> ccclxxvii., 62, 1637.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f518'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r518'>518</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>S.P.D.</i> ccclxxvii., 64, 1637.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f519'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r519'>519</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>S.P.D.</i> ccclxxxvii., 66.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f520'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r520'>520</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Hist. MSS. Com.</i>, 14 Rep. App., VIII., p. 142.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f521'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r521'>521</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>C. R.</i> June 12, 1640. Order concerning the Brewers of Tiverton.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f522'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r522'>522</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>C. R.</i> 22nd March, 1638-9.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f523'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r523'>523</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>C. R.</i> May 8, 1639.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f524'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r524'>524</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Strood Churchwardens’ Accounts</i>, Add. MSS., 36937, p. 263., 1683.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f525'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r525'>525</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Atkinson, (J. C.), <i>Yorks. N. R. Q.S. Records</i>, Vol. I., p. 95., 1607.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f526'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r526'>526</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ferguson, <i>Carlisle</i>, p. 280, <i>Court Leet Rolls</i>,. October
-21, 1625.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f527'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r527'>527</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Atkinson, (J. C.), <i>Yorks. N. R. Q.S. Records</i>, Vol. I., p. 159, 1609.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f528'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r528'>528</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Atkinson, (J. C.), <i>Yorks.
-N. R. Q.S. Records</i>, Vol. II., pp. 53-54, 1614.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f529'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r529'>529</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i> Vol. I., p. 93, 1607.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f530'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r530'>530</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Tingey, (J. C.), <i>Records of City of Norwich</i>, Vol. I., p. 388, 1676.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f531'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r531'>531</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ante., p. 50.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f532'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r532'>532</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>True Account how Mr. Reading’s House.</i></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f533'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r533'>533</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Baillie, Lady Grizell, <i>Household Book</i>. p. 91., 1714.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f534'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r534'>534</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Hertford County Records</i>, Vol. I., p. 68., 1641.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f535'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r535'>535</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Somerset Q.S. Records</i>, Vol. II., pp. 40-1, 1627.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f536'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r536'>536</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Hist. MSS. Com.</i>, 14 Rep., app. viii., p. 99, 1629.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f537'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r537'>537</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Phipps, (Thomas), <i>Proposal for raising £1,000,000 Sterling yearly</i>.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f538'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r538'>538</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Hertford County Records</i>, Vol. I., p. 289, 1678.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f539'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r539'>539</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Middlesex Sessions Book</i>, p. 23, 1690.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f540'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r540'>540</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Hertford County Records</i>, Vol. I., p. 174, 1665.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f541'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r541'>541</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Latimer, <i>Bristol</i>, p. 359, 1670. <i>Court Leet for St. Stephen’s
-Parish.</i></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f542'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r542'>542</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Harl. MSS.</i>, 2054 (4), fo., 6.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f543'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r543'>543</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Nottingham Records</i>, Vol. IV., p. 325, 1614.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f544'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r544'>544</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Hertford County Records</i>, Vol. I., p. 59, 1626.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f545'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r545'>545</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Fiennes, (Celia), p. 226, <i>Through England on a Side-Saddle.</i></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f546'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r546'>546</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>S.P.D.</i> ccl., 22, November 6, 1633. Lord Mayor and others to the Council.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f547'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r547'>547</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Holdsworth</i>, Vol. III., p. 408.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f548'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r548'>548</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>C.W.</i> 1641. <i>The Bespotted Jesuite.</i></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f549'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r549'>549</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Heylin (Peter), <i>The Voyage of France</i>, p. 29, 1673.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f550'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r550'>550</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Falkland, Lady Letice, Vi-countess, Life and Death of.</i></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f551'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r551'>551</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Stow, <i>London</i>, I., pp. 185-186.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f552'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r552'>552</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Stow, <i>London</i>, app., p. 58.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f553'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r553'>553</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Stow, <i>London</i>, App., pp. 57-58.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f554'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r554'>554</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i> I., pp. 175-6.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f555'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r555'>555</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Stow, <i>London</i>, app., p. 42.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f556'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r556'>556</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Stow, <i>London</i>, app., p. 43.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f557'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r557'>557</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>S.P.D.</i>, cccclv., 87., May 30th, 1640.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f558'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r558'>558</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Stow, <i>London</i> I., p. 211.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f559'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r559'>559</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>S.P.D.</i>, dxxxix, 231., November 15, 1644.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f560'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r560'>560</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>S.P.D.</i>, Interreg: I, 62, p. 633., 17 Aug., 1649.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f561'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r561'>561</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Stow, <i>London</i>, V., p. 433.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f562'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r562'>562</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Guilding, <i>Reading Records</i>, Vol. II., p. 241, 1625.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f563'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r563'>563</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i> Vol. II., p. 244, 1625.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f564'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r564'>564</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i> Vol. III., p. 371.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f565'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r565'>565</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i> Vol. III., p. 384, 1637.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f566'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r566'>566</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Guilding, <i>Reading Records</i>, Vol. III., p. 459.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f567'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r567'>567</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i> Vol. IV., p. 8.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f568'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r568'>568</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Sussex Arch. Coll.</i>, Vol. XXIII., p. 90. <i>Hastings Documents</i>, 1601.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f569'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r569'>569</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Sussex Arch. Coll.</i>, Vol. XX., p. 117. <i>Acc. Book of Cowden,</i> 1704.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f570'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r570'>570</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i> p. 118.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f571'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r571'>571</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Hertford County Records</i>, Vol. I., p. 435, 1698.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f572'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r572'>572</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Atkinson, J. C., <i>Yorks. N. R. Q.S. Records</i>, Vol. VII., p. 91. 1688.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f573'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r573'>573</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Falkland, Lady Letice, Vi-countess, Life and Death of.</i></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f574'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r574'>574</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Sussex Arch. Coll.</i>, Vol. I., p. 72. <i>Rev. Giles Moore’s Journal.</i></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f575'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r575'>575</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i> Vol. I., p. 100. 1667.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f576'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r576'>576</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Memoirs of Col. Hutchinson</i>, p. 377.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f577'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r577'>577</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Fell (Sarah), <i>Household Accounts</i>, p. 285. June 20, 1676.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f578'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r578'>578</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Sussex Arch. Coll.</i>, Vol. III., p. 123. <i>Journal of Timothy Burrell.</i> 1688.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f579'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r579'>579</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Baillie, Lady Grisell, Household Book.</i> Intro. lxvii.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f580'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r580'>580</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Sussex Arch. Coll.</i>, Vol. XLVIII., p. 121. 1643-1649.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f581'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r581'>581</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Foulis, Sir John, <i>Account Book</i>, p. 346. May 23, 1704.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f582'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r582'>582</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i> p. 396. August 22, 1705.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f583'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r583'>583</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i> p. 314. January 28, 1703.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f584'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r584'>584</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Add. MSS.</i> 36308.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f585'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r585'>585</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Sowerby (Leonard). <i>The Ladies’ Dispensatory.</i> 1651.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f586'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r586'>586</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Fell, (Sarah). <i>Household Accounts</i>, p. 95. July 5, 1674.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f587'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r587'>587</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Memoirs of Col. Hutchinson</i>, p. 12.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f588'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r588'>588</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Compleat Servant-maid</i>, p. 40.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f589'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r589'>589</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Rogers, Timothy. <i>Character of a Good Woman</i>, p. 42-43.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f590'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r590'>590</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Falkland, Lady Lettice, Vi-countess, The Life and Death of.</i></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f591'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r591'>591</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Bedell, (Wm.), Life and Death of</i>, p. 2.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f592'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r592'>592</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Jonson, (Ben.), <i>The Alchemist</i>, Act IV. Sc. I.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f593'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r593'>593</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Josselin, (R.), <i>Diary</i>, pp. 163-4.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f594'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r594'>594</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Rawdon, (Marmaduke), Life of</i>, p. 85.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f595'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r595'>595</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Martindale (Adam), Life of</i>, p. 21. 1632.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f596'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r596'>596</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Verney Family</i>, Vol. 2, p. 270. 1647.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f597'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r597'>597</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Dictionary of National Biography.</i></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f598'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r598'>598</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Hoare, Sir R. C., <i>History of Modern Wilts</i>, Vol. VI., p. 465.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f599'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r599'>599</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Hoare, Sir R. C., <i>History of Modern Wilts</i>, Vol. VI., p. 467.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f600'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r600'>600</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Stow, <i>London</i> I., p. 132.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f601'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r601'>601</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Hoare, Sir R. C., <i>History of Modern Wilts</i>, Vol. VI., p. 341.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f602'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r602'>602</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Barrett, <i>History of Apothecaries</i>, Intro., p. xxxii.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f603'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r603'>603</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>S.P.D.</i>, ccc., 75., October 1635.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f604'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r604'>604</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Barrett, <i>History of Apothecaries</i>, pp. 28-9.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f605'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r605'>605</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Mayo, C. H., <i>Municipal Records of Dorchester</i>, p. 428.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f606'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r606'>606</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Croker, (John), <i>Brief Memoirs</i>, p. 5.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f607'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r607'>607</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Statutes at Large.</i> 34 Henry VIII. C. 8.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f608'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r608'>608</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Humble Petition of many thousands of Citizens, and Inhabitants in
-and about London.</i></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f609'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r609'>609</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Hertford Co. Records</i>, Vol. I., p. 328.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f610'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r610'>610</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Memoirs of Col. Hutchinson</i>, p. 427.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f611'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r611'>611</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Yonge, Walter, <i>Diary</i>, Intro., xxii.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f612'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r612'>612</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i> Vol. XVIII., p. 196. <i>Accounts of Parish of Mayfield.</i></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f613'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r613'>613</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Cratfield Parish Papers</i>, p. 179., 1640.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f614'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r614'>614</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Mayo, C. H., <i>Municipal Records of Dorchester</i>, p. 516, 1640.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f615'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r615'>615</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i> p. 518, 1651.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f616'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r616'>616</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i> p. 518, 1649-50.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f617'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r617'>617</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i> pp. 518-9. 1652-1654.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f618'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r618'>618</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i> p. 519.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f619'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r619'>619</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Sussex Arch. Coll.</i>, Vol. XX., p. 114. <i>Account Book of Cowden</i>, 1690.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f620'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r620'>620</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Somerset Q.S. Records</i>, Vol. III., p. 212. 1653.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f621'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r621'>621</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Raynold, <i>The Byrth of Mankynd</i>, Prologue.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f622'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r622'>622</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Sharp (Jane), <i>The Midwives Book</i>, p. 3.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f623'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r623'>623</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>S.P.D.</i> 1630. Sign Manual Car. I., Vol. VII. No. 11.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f624'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r624'>624</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Mrs. Shaw’s Innocency Restored.</i> 1653.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f625'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r625'>625</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Sharp, Mrs. Jane, <i>The Midwives Book, or the whole Art of Midwifery
-discovered</i>.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f626'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r626'>626</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Sharp, Mrs. Jane, <i>The Midwives Book</i>, pp. 2-4.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f627'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r627'>627</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Culpeper, Nich., Gent., Student in Physick and Astrologie, <i>Directory for
-Midwives</i>.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f628'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r628'>628</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Chamberlain (Peter), <i>A Voice in Rhama, or the Crie of Women and
-Children</i>. 1646.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f629'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r629'>629</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Cellier (Mrs.). <i>A scheme for the foundation of a Royal Hospital, Harleian
-Miscellany, Vol. IV. pp. 142-147.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c024'>The scheme was well thought out, and some details from it may be given here
-as showing the aspirations of an able woman for the development of her profession.
-Mrs. Cellier proposed that the number of midwives admitted to the first rank should
-be limited to 1000, and that these should pay a fee of £5 on admittance and the like
-sum annually. All the midwives entering this first rank should be eligible for the
-position of Matron, or assistant to the Government.</p>
-
-<p class='c024'>Other midwives may be admitted to the second thousand on payment of half the
-above fees.</p>
-
-<p class='c024'>The money raised by these fees is to be used for the purpose of
-erecting “one good, large and convenient House, or Hospital,” ... for
-the Receiving and Taking in of exposed Children, to be subject to the
-Care, Conduct and Management of one Governess, one female Secretary,
-and twelve Matron Assistants, subject to the visitation of such
-Persons, as to your Majesty’s Wisdom shall be thought necessary ...
-the children to be afterwards educated in proper Learning, Arts and
-Mysteries according to their several capacities. As a further
-endowment for this institution, Mrs. Cellier asks for one fifth part
-of the voluntary charity collected in the Parishes comprised within
-the Limits of the weekly Bills of Mortality, and that in addition
-collecting Boxes may be placed in every Church, Chapel, or publick
-Place of Divine Service of any Religion whatsoever within their
-limits. The scheme further provides “that such Hospital may be allowed
-to establish twelve lesser convenient houses, in twelve of the
-greatest parishes, each to be governed by one of the twelve Matrons,
-Assistants to the Corporation of the Midwives, which Houses may be for
-the taking in, delivery and month’s Maintenance, at a price certain of
-any woman, that any of the parishes within the limits aforesaid, shall
-by the overseers of the poor place in them; such women being to be
-subject, with the Children born of them, to the future care of that
-parish, whose overseers place them there to be delivered,
-notwithstanding such House shall not happen to stand in the proper
-Parish.” ...</p>
-
-<p class='c024'><span class='pageno' id='Page_274'>274</span>Then follow proposals for the care of the children, requiring that
-they may be privileged to take to themselves Sirnames and to be made
-capable, by such names, of any honour or employment, without being
-liable to reproach, for their innocent misfortune, and that the
-children so educated may be free members of every city and
-corporation.</p>
-
-<p class='c024'>After the first settlement, no married woman shall “be admitted to be
-either governess, secretary, or any of the twelve principal assistants
-to the Government and that no married person of either sex shall be
-suffered to inhabit within the said Hospital, to avoid such
-inconveniences as may arise, as the children grow to maturity; ... if
-any of these Persons do marry afterwards, then to clear their accounts
-and depart the house, by being expelled the society.”</p>
-
-<p class='c024'>Among many interesting rules for governing the Hospital, Mrs. Cellier
-appoints “That a woman, sufficiently skilled in writing and accounts,
-be appointed secretary to the governess and company of midwives, to be
-present at all controversies about the art of midwifery, to register
-all the extraordinary accidents happening in the practise, which all
-licensed midwives are, from time to time, to report to the society;
-that the female secretary be reckoned an assistant to the government,
-next to the governess and capable of succeeding in her stead.”</p>
-
-<p class='c024'>“That the principal physician or man-midwife, examine all
-extraordinary accidents and, once a month at least, read a publick
-Lecture to the whole society of licensed midwives, who are all to be
-obliged to be present at it, if not employed in their practise.” The
-lectures to be kept for future reference by the midwives.</p>
-
-<p class='c024'>“That no men shall be present at such public lectures, on any pretence
-whatsoever, except such able doctors and surgeons, as shall enter
-themselves students in the said art, and pay, for such their
-admittance, ten pounds, and ten pounds a year.” The physicians and
-surgeons so admitted were to be “of Council with the principle
-man-midwife and be capable of succeeding him, by election of the
-governess, her secretary, twelve assistants, and the twenty-four lower
-assistants.”</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f630'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r630'>630</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Cellier, (Eliz.). <i>To Dr. ——, an answer to his Queries concerning the
-Colledg of Midwives</i>, p. 7.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f631'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r631'>631</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Carrier (Henriette.) <i>Origine de la Maternité de Paris.</i></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f632'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r632'>632</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Pechey, <i>Compleat Midwife</i>, Preface.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f633'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r633'>633</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Cellier (Eliz.). <i>To Dr. —— an answer to his Queries concerning the
-Colledg of Midwives</i>, p. 6.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f634'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r634'>634</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Exeter, Articles to be enquired of by the Churchwardens.</i> 1646.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f635'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r635'>635</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Canterbury, Articles to be enquired.</i> 1636.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f636'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r636'>636</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Sussex Arch. Coll.</i>, Vol. IV., pp. 249-50. Extracts from Parish
-Registers.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f637'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r637'>637</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Watson, <i>Clergyman’s Law</i>, p. 318.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f638'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r638'>638</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Heylyn (Peter), Cyprianus Anglicus</i>, p. 27.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f639'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r639'>639</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Bacon, (Sir Nat.), <i>Official Papers</i>, p. 176. 1591.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f640'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r640'>640</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>S.P.D.</i>, ccxcvi., 17. August 21, 1635. <i>Visitation
-presentments by the Churchwardens.</i></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f641'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r641'>641</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>S.P.D.</i>, ccxcv., 6. August 19, 1636.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f642'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r642'>642</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Hertford County Records</i>, Vol. I., p. 435. 1698.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f643'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r643'>643</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>The Rev. Giles Moore “gave Mat [his adopted daughter] then answering
-for Edwd. Cripps young daughter 5<i>s.</i> whereof shee gave to the mydwyfe
-2<i>s.</i> &amp; 1<i>s.</i> to the Nurse. Myself gave to the mydwyfe in the drinking
-bowle 1<i>s.</i>” (<i>Sussex Arch. Coll.</i>, Vol. I., p. 113. <i>Rev. Giles
-Moore, Journal.</i>)</p>
-
-<p class='c024'>Later is entered in the Journal, he being god-father “1674. Mat was
-brought to bed of a daughter. Gave the mydwyfe, goodwyfe &amp; Nurse 5<i>s.</i>
-each.” (<i>Ibid.</i> p. 119.)</p>
-
-<p class='c024'>After Lady Darce’s confinement at Herstmonceux Castle, is entered in
-the accounts “paid my Lord’s benevolence to Widdow Craddock the
-midwife of Battle £5. 0. 0.” (<i>Sussex Arch. Coll.</i>, Vol.
-xlviii. 1643-1649.)</p>
-
-<p class='c024'>Entries in a similar book of the Howard family give “To my young
-ladye’s midwyfe xxˢ (p. 227-8). To Mrs. Fairfax her Midwife by my Lord
-xxˢ ... by my Ladie xxˢ. More to Mrs. Fairefax her midwife by my
-Ladie’s commaund iijˡⁱ” (<i>Howard Household Book</i>, p. 263. 1629.)</p>
-
-<p class='c024'>Sarah Fell records the presents given to her sister’s midwife—Jan yᵉ 1st 1675</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>by mᵒ Bro. Loweʳ to give Jane Chorley his wifes midwife 1. 00.00</div>
- <div class='line'>by mᵒ Motheʳ gave to sᵈ midwife 5. 00</div>
- <div class='line'>by mᵒ Sistʳ Sus: sistʳ Rach: &amp; I gave heʳ 5. 00</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c024'>Dec. 6. 1676. By M° Given ffran. Laite Sister Lowers middwife by ffatheʳ &amp;
-Motheʳ 5<i>s.</i> by sistʳ Sus: 2<i>s.</i> by sistʳ Rach: 2<i>s.</i> myselfe 4<i>s.</i> Dec. 10, 1677
-by mᵒ Motheʳ gave ffrances Layte when she was middwife to Sistʳ Lower of litle
-Love-day Loweʳ 02.06, by mᵒ sistʳ Susannah gave heʳ then 01.00 by mᵒ sister Rachell
-gave her then 01.00 (Fell, Sarah, <i>Household Accounts</i>).</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f644'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r644'>644</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Assheton (Nicholas), <i>Journal</i>, p. 81.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f645'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r645'>645</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Sussex Arch. Coll</i>., Vol. XX., p. 101 and p. 104. <i>Account Book of Cowden.</i></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f646'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r646'>646</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>One pound Scots—20<i>d.</i> sterling.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f647'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r647'>647</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Pepy’s <i>Diary</i>, Vol. I., p. 308. 1661.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f648'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r648'>648</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Chamberlain (Dr. Hugh). <i>Accomplisht Midwife: Epistle to the Reader.</i></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f649'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r649'>649</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f650'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r650'>650</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>McMath (Mr. James, M.D.). <i>The Expert Mid-wife.</i></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f651'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r651'>651</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Ibid.</i></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f652'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r652'>652</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Chamberlain (Hugh). <i>Accomplisht Midwife: Epistle to Reader.</i></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f653'>
-<p class='c024'><span class='label'><a href='#r653'>653</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Pechey, <i>Compleat Midwife</i>, p. 349. Secrets of Madame Louyse Bourgeois,
-midwife to the Queen of France, which she left to her Daughter as a guide for her.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c001' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_322'>322</span>
- <h2 id='idx' class='c011'>INDEX</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c023'><a id='noentry'></a>Individual entries in the Index often have
-references to other topics in the index (<i>e.g.</i> “<i>see</i>
-Apprentice;”). If a term is referenced by <i>See</i> but there is no
-entry in the index for that term, then the link will direct you here.</p>
-<ul class='index c001'>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Agriculture'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Agriculture, <a href='#Page_9'>9</a>, <a href='#Page_42'>42</a>-<a href='#Page_92'>92</a> <i>passim</i>, <a href='#Page_93'>93</a>, <a href='#Page_150'>150</a>, <a href='#Page_292'>292</a>;<i>seq.</i>,
- <ul>
- <li><i>see</i> <a href='#Apprentice'>Apprentice</a>, <a href='#Capitalism'>Capitalism</a>, <a href='#Dairy'>Dairy</a>, <a href='#Farmer'>Farmer</a>, <a href='#Husbandman'>Husbandman</a>, <a href='#Labourer'>Labourer</a>, <a href='#Pig-keeping'>Pig-keeping</a>, <a href='#Poultry-keeping'>Poultry-keeping</a>, <a href='#Spinning'>Spinning</a>, <a href='#Wages'>Wages</a>, <a href='#Wage-earner'>Wage-earner</a>, <a href='#Wife'>Wife</a>, <a href='#Yeoman'>Yeoman</a>;</li>
- <li><i>conditions for rearing children</i>, <a href='#Page_43'>43</a>, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Alehouse'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Alehouse, <a href='#Page_91'>91</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_101'>101</a>, <a href='#Page_225'>225</a>, <a href='#Page_229'>229</a>, <a href='#Page_231'>231</a>-<a href='#Page_233'>233</a> <i>passim</i>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>see</i> <a href='#Brewing'>Brewing</a>, <a href='#Inn-keeper'>Inn-keeper</a>;</li>
- <li><i>livelihood for widows and infirm people</i>, <a href='#Page_230'>230</a>-<a href='#Page_232'>232</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Alewife'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Alewife, <a href='#Page_222'>222</a>, <a href='#Page_232'>232</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>see</i> <a href='#Brewing'>Brewing</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Apothecaries'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Apothecaries, <a href='#Page_184'>184</a>, <a href='#Page_259'>259</a>-<a href='#Page_263'>263</a> <i>passim</i>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>see</i> <a href='#Doctor'>Doctor</a>, <a href='#Gilds'>Gilds</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Apprentice'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Apprentice, <a href='#Page_6'>6</a>, <a href='#Page_26'>26</a>, <a href='#Page_112'>112</a>, <a href='#Page_144'>144</a>, <a href='#Page_156'>156</a>, <a href='#Page_185'>185</a>, <a href='#Page_195'>195</a>, <a href='#Page_211'>211</a>, <a href='#Page_213'>213</a>, <a href='#Page_293'>293</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>agriculture</i>, <a href='#Page_59'>59</a>;</li>
- <li><i>Gild trades</i>, <i>boys</i>, <a href='#Page_163'>163</a>, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_177'>177</a>, <a href='#Page_185'>185</a>, <a href='#Page_187'>187</a>, <a href='#Page_260'>260</a>, <i>girls</i>, <a href='#Page_10'>10</a>, <a href='#Page_150'>150</a>, <a href='#Page_166'>166</a>, <a href='#Page_175'>175</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_185'>185</a>, <a href='#Page_195'>195</a>, <a href='#Page_261'>261</a>, <a href='#Page_298'>298</a>;</li>
- <li><i>other trades</i>, <i>boys</i>, <a href='#Page_159'>159</a>, <a href='#Page_185'>185</a>, <a href='#Page_214'>214</a>, <a href='#Page_226'>226</a>, <a href='#Page_261'>261</a>, <i>girls</i>, <a href='#Page_151'>151</a>, <a href='#Page_194'>194</a>, <a href='#Page_217'>217</a>, <a href='#Page_220'>220</a>, <a href='#Page_293'>293</a>;</li>
- <li><i>retail trades</i>, <a href='#Page_200'>200</a> <i>seq.</i>;</li>
- <li><i>silk trade</i>, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a>, <a href='#Page_141'>141</a> <i>seq.</i>;</li>
- <li><i>weavers</i>, <a href='#Page_104'>104</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a>;</li>
- <li><i>duties of apprentices</i>, <a href='#Page_5'>5</a>, <a href='#Page_157'>157</a>;</li>
- <li><i>restriction of numbers</i>, <a href='#Page_10'>10</a>, <a href='#Page_156'>156</a>, <a href='#Page_188'>188</a>, <a href='#Page_298'>298</a>;</li>
- <li><i>apprentices of women</i>, <a href='#Page_162'>162</a>, <a href='#Page_168'>168</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_173'>173</a>, <a href='#Page_179'>179</a>, <a href='#Page_194'>194</a>, <a href='#Page_220'>220</a>;</li>
- <li><i>of widows</i>, <a href='#Page_104'>104</a>, <a href='#Page_162'>162</a>, <a href='#Page_168'>168</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_173'>173</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_183'>183</a>, <a href='#Page_187'>187</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_190'>190</a>, <a href='#Page_293'>293</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'>Apprenticeship, <a href='#Page_146'>146</a>, <a href='#Page_151'>151</a>, <a href='#Page_156'>156</a>, <a href='#Page_160'>160</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a>, <a href='#Page_177'>177</a>, <a href='#Page_184'>184</a>, <a href='#Page_191'>191</a>, <a href='#Page_194'>194</a>, <a href='#Page_196'>196</a>, <a href='#Page_200'>200</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_212'>212</a>-<a href='#Page_214'>214</a> <i>passim</i>, <a href='#Page_234'>234</a>, <a href='#Page_261'>261</a>, <a href='#Page_269'>269</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_298'>298</a>, <a href='#Page_301'>301</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Apprentice Trade, <a href='#Page_106'>106</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Aristocracy'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Aristocracy,
- <ul>
- <li><i>see</i> <a href='#Capitalists'>Capitalist</a>;</li>
- <li><i>character of women</i>, <a href='#Page_38'>38</a>-<a href='#Page_41'>41</a>, <a href='#Page_253'>253</a>, <a href='#Page_289'>289</a>, <a href='#Page_296'>296</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_305'>305</a> <i>seq.</i>;</li>
- <li><i>confinements</i>, <a href='#Page_267'>267</a> <i>seq.</i>;</li>
- <li><i>occupations</i>, <a href='#Page_14'>14</a>-<a href='#Page_27'>27</a>, <a href='#Page_35'>35</a>, <a href='#Page_38'>38</a>, <a href='#Page_53'>53</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_253'>253</a>, <a href='#Page_255'>255</a> <i>seq.</i></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Armourers'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Armourers and Brasiers, <a href='#Page_178'>178</a>, <a href='#Page_183'>183</a> <i>seq.</i>
- <ul>
- <li><i>See</i> <a href='#Gilds'>Gilds</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'>Assheton, Nicholas, <a href='#Page_280'>280</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Astell, Mary, <a href='#Page_38'>38</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Assize, <i>of beer</i>, <a href='#Page_224'>224</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>of bread</i>, <a href='#Page_211'>211</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c001'><a id='Badger'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Badger, <a href='#Page_204'>204</a> <i>seq.</i></li>
- <li class='c054'>Baillie, Lady Grisell, <a href='#Page_16'>16</a>, <a href='#Page_68'>68</a>, <a href='#Page_229'>229</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'><span class='pageno' id='Page_323'>323</span><a id='Bakers'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Bakers, <a href='#Page_8'>8</a>, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a>, <a href='#Page_202'>202</a>, <a href='#Page_208'>208</a>-<a href='#Page_215'>215</a> <i>passim</i>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>corporations of</i>, <a href='#Page_212'>212</a> <i>seq.</i>;</li>
- <li><i>restrictions on</i>, <a href='#Page_210'>210</a>, <a href='#Page_211'>211</a>, <a href='#Page_215'>215</a>;</li>
- <li><i>women bake for domestic purposes</i>, <a href='#Page_47'>47</a>, <a href='#Page_50'>50</a>, <a href='#Page_210'>210</a>, <a href='#Page_214'>214</a>;</li>
- <li><i>for sale</i>, <a href='#Page_30'>30</a>, <a href='#Page_213'>213</a>, <a href='#Page_214'>214</a>;</li>
- <li><i>wife assists husband</i>, <a href='#Page_211'>211</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_215'>215</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'>Baptist, <a href='#Page_240'>240</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Barber-surgeons'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Barber-surgeons, <a href='#Page_259'>259</a>-<a href='#Page_263'>263</a> <i>passim</i>, <a href='#Page_265'>265</a>, <a href='#Page_276'>276</a>, <a href='#Page_284'>284</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>see</i> <a href='#Gilds'>Gilds</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'>Barrymore, Lady, <a href='#Page_14'>14</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Bedell, Mrs. Eliz., <a href='#Page_256'>256</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Best, <a href='#Page_60'>60</a>-<a href='#Page_62'>62</a> <i>passim</i>, <a href='#Page_78'>78</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Beverley'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Beverley, <a href='#Page_180'>180</a>, <a href='#Page_183'>183</a>, <a href='#Page_211'>211</a>, <a href='#Page_221'>221</a> <i>seq.</i></li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Binder'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Binder, <a href='#Page_161'>161</a>, <a href='#Page_167'>167</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Birth-rate, <a href='#Page_4'>4</a>, <a href='#Page_43'>43</a>, <a href='#Page_86'>86</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_305'>305</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Bleacher, <a href='#Page_129'>129</a>, <a href='#Page_145'>145</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Bookseller, <a href='#Page_161'>161</a>, <a href='#Page_168'>168</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Bourgeois, Mme. Louise, <a href='#Page_275'>275</a>, <a href='#Page_284'>284</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Borough'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Borough, <a href='#Page_209'>209</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>see</i> <a href='#Corporations'>Corporations</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'>Brathwaite, Richard, <a href='#Page_29'>29</a>, <a href='#Page_53'>53</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Brewing'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Brewing, <a href='#Page_8'>8</a>, <a href='#Page_11'>11</a>, <a href='#Page_209'>209</a>, <a href='#Page_221'>221</a>-<a href='#Page_233'>233</a> <i>passim</i>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>see</i> <a href='#Alehouse'>Alehouse</a>, <a href='#Alewife'>Alewife</a>, <a href='#Apprentice'>Apprentices</a>, <a href='#Capitalism'>Capitalism</a>, <a href='#Domestic-Industry'>Domestic</a>, <a href='#Gilds'>Gilds</a>;</li>
- <li><i>Brewster</i> <a href='#Page_11'>11</a>, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a>, <a href='#Page_221'>221</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_229'>229</a>;</li>
- <li><i>Common Brewers</i>, <a href='#Page_223'>223</a>-<a href='#Page_227'>227</a> <i>passim</i>, <a href='#Page_230'>230</a>;</li>
- <li><i>Fellowship of</i>, <a href='#Page_223'>223</a>-<a href='#Page_226'>226</a>;</li>
- <li><i>for domestic purposes</i>, <a href='#Page_5'>5</a>, <a href='#Page_8'>8</a>, <a href='#Page_47'>47</a>, <a href='#Page_50'>50</a>, <a href='#Page_210'>210</a>, <a href='#Page_223'>223</a>;</li>
- <li><i>for retail</i>, <a href='#Page_210'>210</a>, <a href='#Page_222'>222</a>-<a href='#Page_230'>230</a>;</li>
- <li><i>for wages</i>, <a href='#Page_229'>229</a> <i>seq.</i></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Bristol'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Bristol, <a href='#Page_103'>103</a>, <a href='#Page_134'>134</a>, <a href='#Page_182'>182</a>, <a href='#Page_185'>185</a>, <a href='#Page_191'>191</a>, <a href='#Page_232'>232</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Burford, Rose de, <a href='#Page_140'>140</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Burling'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Burling, <a href='#Page_105'>105</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_132'>132</a>, <a href='#Page_145'>145</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Bury'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Bury, <a href='#Page_222'>222</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Bury St. Edmunds, <a href='#Page_227'>227</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Business'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Business affairs of family, <a href='#Page_41'>41</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>see</i> <a href='#noentry'>Family</a>;</li>
- <li><i>managed by wife</i>, <a href='#Page_16'>16</a>, <a href='#Page_21'>21</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_54'>54</a> <i>seq.</i>;</li>
- <li><i>superior capacity of Dutch women</i>, <a href='#Page_36'>36</a>-<a href='#Page_38'>38</a> <i>passim</i>;</li>
- <li><i>wife unequal to</i>, <a href='#Page_20'>20</a>, <a href='#Page_22'>22</a> <i>seq.</i>;</li>
- <li><i>women’s capacity for</i>, <a href='#Page_20'>20</a>, <a href='#Page_34'>34</a>, <a href='#Page_38'>38</a> <i>seq.</i></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Butcher'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Butcher, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a>, <a href='#Page_202'>202</a>, <a href='#Page_209'>209</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_216'>216</a>-<a href='#Page_219'>219</a> <i>passim</i>, <a href='#Page_221'>221</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>see</i> <a href='#Apprentice'>Apprentices</a>;</li>
- <li><i>selling wool</i>, <a href='#Page_107'>107</a>;</li>
- <li><i>wage-earners</i>, <a href='#Page_219'>219</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'>Buttons, <a href='#Page_142'>142</a>, <a href='#Page_144'>144</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Butter'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Butter, <a href='#Page_8'>8</a>, <a href='#Page_49'>49</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>see</i> <a href='#Dairy'>Dairy</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c001'>Cane-chair bottoming, <a href='#Page_195'>195</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'><span class='pageno' id='Page_324'>324</span><a id='Capitalism'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Capitalism, <a href='#Page_6'>6</a>, <a href='#Page_300'>300</a>, <a href='#Page_308'>308</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>see</i> <a href='#Capitalists'>Capitalistic Organisation</a>, <a href='#noentry'>Family Industry</a>, <a href='#Gilds'>Gilds</a>, <a href='#Industry'>Industrialism</a>, <a href='#Linen-manufacture'>Linen-manufacture</a>, <a href='#Silk'>Silk</a>, <a href='#Brewing'>Textile Trades</a>, <a href='#Woollen'>Woollen</a>;</li>
- <li><i>definition of</i>, <a href='#Page_7'>7</a>;</li>
- <li><i>demand for labour</i>, <a href='#Page_90'>90</a> <i>seq.</i>;</li>
- <li><i>effect on Domestic Industry</i>, <a href='#Page_8'>8</a>, <a href='#Page_11'>11</a>, <a href='#Page_94'>94</a>;</li>
- <li><i>effect on Family Industry</i>, <a href='#Page_8'>8</a>, <a href='#Page_10'>10</a>, <a href='#Page_11'>11</a>, <a href='#Page_94'>94</a>, <a href='#Page_142'>142</a>, <a href='#Page_156'>156</a>, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a>, <a href='#Page_196'>196</a>, <a href='#Page_297'>297</a>;</li>
- <li><i>effect on Marital Relations</i>, <a href='#Page_40'>40</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_158'>158</a>, <a href='#Page_167'>167</a>, <a href='#Page_197'>197</a>, <a href='#Page_235'>235</a>, <a href='#Page_296'>296</a>, <a href='#Page_299'>299</a>, <a href='#Page_301'>301</a> <i>seq.</i>;</li>
- <li><i>effect on Motherhood</i>, <a href='#Page_8'>8</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_11'>11</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_306'>306</a>;</li>
- <li><i>effect on Social Organisation</i>, <a href='#Page_8'>8</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_40'>40</a>, <a href='#Page_148'>148</a>, <a href='#Page_300'>300</a>, <a href='#Page_306'>306</a> <i>seq.</i>;</li>
- <li><i>effect on women’s economic position</i>, <a href='#Page_8'>8</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_10'>10</a>, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a>, <a href='#Page_94'>94</a>, <a href='#Page_96'>96</a>, <a href='#Page_98'>98</a>, <a href='#Page_145'>145</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a>, <a href='#Page_167'>167</a>, <a href='#Page_196'>196</a>, <a href='#Page_235'>235</a>, <a href='#Page_295'>295</a>-<a href='#Page_299'>299</a> <i>passim</i>, <a href='#Page_301'>301</a>, <a href='#Page_302'>302</a>, <a href='#Page_307'>307</a>;</li>
- <li><i>effect on women’s morale and physique</i>, <a href='#Page_41'>41</a>;</li>
- <li><i>in agriculture</i>, <a href='#Page_43'>43</a>, <a href='#Page_56'>56</a>, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a>;</li>
- <li><i>in brewing</i>, <a href='#Page_11'>11</a>, <a href='#Page_226'>226</a>, <a href='#Page_230'>230</a>;</li>
- <li><i>in Crafts and Trades</i>, <a href='#Page_156'>156</a>, <a href='#Page_158'>158</a>, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a>, <a href='#Page_196'>196</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Capitalists'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Capitalists,
- <ul>
- <li><i>see</i> <a href='#Aristocracy'>Aristocracy</a>;</li>
- <li><i>Definition of</i>, <a href='#Page_14'>14</a>;</li>
- <li><i>idleness of wives and daughters</i>, <a href='#Page_10'>10</a>, <a href='#Page_38'>38</a>, <a href='#Page_41'>41</a>, <a href='#Page_50'>50</a>, <a href='#Page_235'>235</a>, <a href='#Page_296'>296</a>-<a href='#Page_298'>298</a> <i>passim</i>, <a href='#Page_305'>305</a>;</li>
- <li><i>women’s activity as Capitalists</i>, <a href='#Page_14'>14</a>-<a href='#Page_41'>41</a> <i>passim</i>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'>Capitalistic organisation, <a href='#Page_13'>13</a>, <a href='#Page_94'>94</a>, <a href='#Page_146'>146</a>, <a href='#Page_196'>196</a>, <a href='#Page_236'>236</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>see</i> <a href='#Capitalism'>Capitalism</a>, <a href='#Industry'>Industrialism</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Carding'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Carding, <i>employment for poor</i>, <a href='#Page_116'>116</a>, <a href='#Page_132'>132</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>men</i>, <a href='#Page_102'>102</a>, <a href='#Page_116'>116</a>;</li>
- <li><i>women</i>, <a href='#Page_99'>99</a>, <a href='#Page_108'>108</a>, <a href='#Page_120'>120</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_141'>141</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'>Card maker, <a href='#Page_190'>190</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Carlisle'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Carlisle, <a href='#Page_44'>44</a>, <a href='#Page_53'>53</a>, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a>, <a href='#Page_201'>201</a>, <a href='#Page_203'>203</a>, <a href='#Page_211'>211</a>, <a href='#Page_215'>215</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Carpenter'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Carpenter, <a href='#Page_170'>170</a>-<a href='#Page_178'>178</a> <i>passim</i>, <a href='#Page_187'>187</a>, <a href='#Page_195'>195</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>see</i> <a href='#Companies'>Companies</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'>Carrier of letters, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Cellier, Mrs., <a href='#Page_195'>195</a>, <a href='#Page_269'>269</a>, <a href='#Page_273'>273</a>-<a href='#Page_276'>276</a> <i>passim</i>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Chamberlain, Dr. Hugh, <a href='#Page_281'>281</a>, <a href='#Page_283'>283</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Chamberlain, Peter, <a href='#Page_272'>272</a> <i>seq.</i></li>
- <li class='c054'>Chandler, <i>wax and tallow</i>, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a>, <a href='#Page_195'>195</a>, <a href='#Page_200'>200</a>, <a href='#Page_202'>202</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Chapmen'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Chapmen, <a href='#Page_109'>109</a>, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a>, <a href='#Page_206'>206</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Cheese'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Cheese, <a href='#Page_8'>8</a>, <a href='#Page_49'>49</a>, <a href='#Page_53'>53</a>, <a href='#Page_208'>208</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Chester'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Chester, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a>, <a href='#Page_181'>181</a>, <a href='#Page_211'>211</a>, <a href='#Page_217'>217</a>, <a href='#Page_232'>232</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Child, Sir J., <a href='#Page_36'>36</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Child’s coate seller, <a href='#Page_176'>176</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Children'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Children, <a href='#Page_22'>22</a>, <a href='#Page_45'>45</a>, <a href='#Page_88'>88</a>, <a href='#Page_147'>147</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_192'>192</a>-<a href='#Page_194'>194</a> <i>passim</i>, <a href='#Page_196'>196</a>, <a href='#Page_256'>256</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>see</i> <a href='#Agriculture'>Agriculture</a>, <a href='#Apprentice'>Apprentice</a>, <a href='#Capitalism'>Capitalism</a>, <a href='#noentry'>Cost of Living</a>, <a href='#Education'>Education</a>, <a href='#noentry'>Family</a>, <a href='#Father'>Father</a>, <a href='#Housing'>Housing</a>, <a href='#Husband'>Husband</a>, <a href='#Infant-Mortality'>Infant Mortality</a>, <a href='#Mother'>Mother</a>, <a href='#Nursing'>Nursing</a>, <a href='#Poor'>Poor</a>, <a href='#noentry'>Settlement</a>, <a href='#Wages'>Wages</a>, <a href='#Wage-earner'>Wage-earners</a>, <a href='#Widow'>Widow</a>, <a href='#Wife'>Wife</a>;</li>
- <li><i>attending gild dinners</i>, <a href='#Page_180'>180</a>;</li>
- <li><i>employment in agriculture</i>, <a href='#Page_59'>59</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_64'>64</a>;</li>
- <li><i>in textile manufacture</i>, <a href='#Page_9'>9</a>, <a href='#Page_97'>97</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_106'>106</a>, <a href='#Page_108'>108</a>, <a href='#Page_112'>112</a>-<a href='#Page_114'>114</a> <i>passim</i>, <a href='#Page_125'>125</a>, <a href='#Page_130'>130</a>-<a href='#Page_134'>134</a> <i>passim</i>, <a href='#Page_140'>140</a>-<a href='#Page_144'>144</a> <i>passim</i>, <a href='#Page_292'>292</a>;</li>
- <li><span class='pageno' id='Page_325'>325</span><i>reduce women’s wage-earning capacity</i>, <a href='#Page_68'>68</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a>, <a href='#Page_136'>136</a>, <a href='#Page_147'>147</a>;</li>
- <li><i>right to work in father’s trade</i>, <a href='#Page_156'>156</a>, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_185'>185</a>;</li>
- <li><i>share in family property</i>, <a href='#Page_7'>7</a>, <a href='#Page_182'>182</a>;</li>
- <li><i>share in supporting family</i>, <a href='#Page_12'>12</a>, <a href='#Page_72'>72</a>, <a href='#Page_79'>79</a>, <a href='#Page_105'>105</a>, <a href='#Page_192'>192</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_293'>293</a>;</li>
- <li><i>under-feeding of</i>, <a href='#Page_64'>64</a>, <a href='#Page_86'>86</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_118'>118</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'>Child-birth, <a href='#Page_46'>46</a>, <a href='#Page_267'>267</a>, <a href='#Page_273'>273</a>, <a href='#Page_276'>276</a>, <a href='#Page_283'>283</a>, <a href='#Page_285'>285</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>see</i> <a href='#Aristocracy'>Aristocracy</a>, <a href='#Common-people'>Common-people</a>, <a href='#Midwifery'>Midwifery</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Church'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Church, <a href='#Page_236'>236</a>-<a href='#Page_242'>242</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>supervision of midwives</i>, <a href='#Page_277'>277</a> <i>seq.</i></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'>Clockmakers, <a href='#Page_187'>187</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Clothiers'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Clothiers, <a href='#Page_98'>98</a>-<a href='#Page_102'>102</a> <i>passim</i>, <a href='#Page_108'>108</a>-<a href='#Page_112'>112</a> <i>passim</i>, <a href='#Page_117'>117</a>-<a href='#Page_124'>124</a> <i>passim</i>, <a href='#Page_141'>141</a>, <a href='#Page_147'>147</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>see</i> <a href='#Poor'>Poor</a>;</li>
- <li><i>force workpeople to take goods for wages</i>, <a href='#Page_117'>117</a> <i>seq.</i>;</li>
- <li><i>women</i>, <a href='#Page_9'>9</a>, <a href='#Page_100'>100</a>-<a href='#Page_102'>102</a> <i>passim</i>, <a href='#Page_124'>124</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Cloth-workers'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Cloth-workers, <a href='#Page_184'>184</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Coal-owner, <a href='#Page_34'>34</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Common-people'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Common-people, <a href='#Page_3'>3</a>, <a href='#Page_257'>257</a>, <a href='#Page_305'>305</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>definition of</i>, <a href='#Page_148'>148</a>, <a href='#Page_253'>253</a>;</li>
- <li><i>childbirth</i>, <a href='#Page_267'>267</a>-<a href='#Page_269'>269</a> <i>passim</i>;</li>
- <li><i>women’s position controlled by necessity</i>, <a href='#Page_41'>41</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Companies'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Companies, <a href='#Page_10'>10</a>, <a href='#Page_25'>25</a>-<a href='#Page_27'>27</a> <i>passim</i>, <a href='#Page_189'>189</a>, <a href='#Page_207'>207</a>, <a href='#Page_212'>212</a>, <a href='#Page_259'>259</a>, <a href='#Page_260'>260</a> <i>seq.</i>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>see</i> Corporations, <a href='#Gilds'>Gilds</a>, <a href='#Apothecaries'>Apothecaries</a>, <a href='#Armourers'>Armourers and Braziers</a>, <a href='#Bakers'>Bakers</a>, <a href='#Barber-surgeons'>Barber-surgeons</a>, <a href='#Binder'>Binder</a>, <a href='#noentry'>Book-sellers</a>, <a href='#Brewing'>Brewsters</a>, <a href='#Butcher'>Butchers</a>, <a href='#Carpenter'>Carpenters</a>, <a href='#noentry'>Clockmakers</a>, <a href='#Cloth-workers'>Cloth-workers</a>, <a href='#Cutler'>Cutlers</a>, <a href='#Drapers'>Drapers</a>, <a href='#Dyer'>Dyers</a>, <a href='#noentry'>Embroiderers</a>, Fishmongers, <a href='#Fullers'>Fullers</a>, <a href='#Girdlers'>Girdlers</a>, <a href='#noentry'>Glass-sellers</a>, <a href='#Glovers'>Glovers</a>, <a href='#Goldsmith'>Goldsmiths</a>, Gold-wire <a href='#noentry'>Drawers</a>, <a href='#Grocers'>Grocers</a>, <a href='#Joiners'>Joiners</a>, <a href='#Leather-sellers'>Leather-sellers</a>, <a href='#Mercers'>Mercers</a>, <a href='#Merchant'>Merchants</a>, <a href='#noentry'>Merchant</a>, <a href='#Tailor'>Taylors</a>, <a href='#Midwife'>Midwives</a>, <a href='#noentry'>Painter-Stainers</a>, <a href='#Pewterers'>Pewterers</a>, <a href='#Physicians'>Physicians</a>, <a href='#noentry'>Point-makers</a>, <a href='#noentry'>Printers</a>, <a href='#noentry'>Publishers</a>, <a href='#noentry'>Shoe-makers</a>, <a href='#Smith'>Smiths</a>, <a href='#Stationers'>Stationers</a>, <a href='#Tailor'>Tailors</a>, <a href='#Upholsterer'>Upholsterers</a>, <a href='#Whit-awers'>Whit-awers</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'>Congreve, <a href='#Page_3'>3</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Contractors, <a href='#Page_31'>31</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Cooking, <a href='#Page_11'>11</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Corporations'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Corporations (Municipal), <a href='#Page_151'>151</a>, <a href='#Page_199'>199</a>-<a href='#Page_204'>204</a> <i>passim</i>, <a href='#Page_209'>209</a>, <a href='#Page_212'>212</a>, <a href='#Page_218'>218</a>, <a href='#Page_224'>224</a>, <a href='#Page_263'>263</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>see</i> <a href='#Borough'>Boroughs</a>, <a href='#Companies'>Companies</a>, <a href='#Customs'>Customs</a>, <a href='#Gilds'>Gilds</a>, <a href='#Beverley'>Beverley</a>, <a href='#Bristol'>Bristol</a>, <a href='#Bury'>Bury</a>, <a href='#noentry'>Bury St. Edmunds</a>, <a href='#Carlisle'>Carlisle</a>, <a href='#Chester'>Chester</a>, <a href='#Dorchester'>Dorchester</a>, <a href='#Exeter'>Exeter</a>, <a href='#Grimsby'>Grimsby</a>, <a href='#Hull'>Hull</a>, <a href='#noentry'>Kingston-upon-Hull</a>, <a href='#Leicester'>Leicester</a>, <a href='#Lincoln'>Lincoln</a>, <a href='#London'>London</a>, <a href='#Manchester'>Manchester</a>, <a href='#Norwich'>Norwich</a>, <a href='#Nottingham'>Nottingham</a>, <a href='#Newcastle-upon-Tyne'>Newcastle-upon-Tyne</a>, <a href='#noentry'>Reading</a>, <a href='#Rye'>Rye</a>, <a href='#noentry'>Salford</a>, <a href='#Salisbury'>Salisbury</a>, <a href='#Sandwich'>Sandwich</a>, <a href='#St-Albans'>St. Albans</a>, <a href='#Sheffield'>Sheffield</a>, <a href='#noentry'>Southampton</a>, <a href='#Tiverton'>Tiverton</a>, <a href='#Torksey'>Torksey</a>, <a href='#York'>York</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'><span class='pageno' id='Page_326'>326</span>Cost of living, <a href='#Page_68'>68</a>-<a href='#Page_79'>79</a> <i>passim</i>, <a href='#Page_134'>134</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>diet of children</i>, <a href='#Page_68'>68</a>, <a href='#Page_71'>71</a>, <a href='#Page_223'>223</a>;</li>
- <li><i>servants</i>, <a href='#Page_68'>68</a>;</li>
- <li><i>difference between men, women and children</i>, <a href='#Page_71'>71</a>-<a href='#Page_73'>73</a> <i>passim</i>, <a href='#Page_127'>127</a>;</li>
- <li><i>Family of three Children</i>, <a href='#Page_68'>68</a>, <a href='#Page_73'>73</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Cotton'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Cotton trade, <a href='#Page_94'>94</a>, <a href='#Page_124'>124</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Cowden, parish of, <a href='#Page_131'>131</a>, <a href='#Page_264'>264</a>, <a href='#Page_280'>280</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Cows'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Cows, <a href='#Page_45'>45</a>, <a href='#Page_47'>47</a>, <a href='#Page_53'>53</a>, <a href='#Page_55'>55</a>, <a href='#Page_57'>57</a>, <a href='#Page_209'>209</a>, <a href='#Page_292'>292</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>see</i> <a href='#Dairy'>Dairy</a>, <a href='#Milking'>Milking</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'>Crafts, <a href='#Page_10'>10</a>, <a href='#Page_150'>150</a>-<a href='#Page_197'>197</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>see</i> <a href='#Gilds'>Gilds</a>, <a href='#Trades'>Trades</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'>Craftsman, <a href='#Page_10'>10</a>, <a href='#Page_197'>197</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Cromwell family, <a href='#Page_18'>18</a>, <a href='#Page_69'>69</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Culpeper, Nicholas, <a href='#Page_271'>271</a> <i>seq.</i></li>
- <li class='c054'>Custom (habit), <a href='#Page_155'>155</a>, <a href='#Page_158'>158</a>-<a href='#Page_161'>161</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Customs'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Customs, <a href='#Page_160'>160</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>see</i> <a href='#Corporations'>Corporations</a>;</li>
- <li><i>excise</i>, <a href='#Page_140'>140</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Cutler'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Cutler, <a href='#Page_187'>187</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Cutworks, <a href='#Page_32'>32</a>.</li>
- <li class='c001'><a id='Dairy'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Dairy,
- <ul>
- <li><i>see</i> <a href='#Butter'>Butter</a>, <a href='#Cheese'>Cheese</a>, <a href='#Cows'>Cows</a>, <a href='#Milking'>Milking</a>;</li>
- <li><i>produce for domestic consumption</i>, <a href='#Page_5'>5</a>, <a href='#Page_43'>43</a>;</li>
- <li><i>as pin-money</i>, <a href='#Page_54'>54</a>;</li>
- <li><i>supplementing family income</i>, <a href='#Page_55'>55</a>;</li>
- <li><i>women’s sphere</i>, <a href='#Page_5'>5</a>, <a href='#Page_50'>50</a>, <a href='#Page_53'>53</a>, <a href='#Page_292'>292</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'>Dant, Joan, <a href='#Page_32'>32</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_206'>206</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Daughters, <a href='#Page_176'>176</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_197'>197</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_252'>252</a>, <a href='#Page_284'>284</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>see</i> <a href='#noentry'>Burling</a>, <a href='#Education'>Education</a>;</li>
- <li><i>employed in parents’ trade</i>, <a href='#Page_184'>184</a>, <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_195'>195</a>, <a href='#Page_200'>200</a>, <a href='#Page_217'>217</a>, <a href='#Page_298'>298</a>;</li>
- <li><i>enters company by patrimony</i>, <a href='#Page_191'>191</a>, <a href='#Page_298'>298</a>;</li>
- <li><i>hired out as weavers</i>, <a href='#Page_103'>103</a>;</li>
- <li><i>sustaining parents</i>, <a href='#Page_115'>115</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'>Decker, Thos., <a href='#Page_158'>158</a> <i>seq.</i></li>
- <li class='c054'>Defoe, Daniel, <a href='#Page_96'>96</a>, <a href='#Page_115'>115</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_156'>156</a> <i>seq.</i></li>
- <li class='c054'>Distaff, <a href='#Page_13'>13</a>, <a href='#Page_48'>48</a>, <a href='#Page_107'>107</a>, <a href='#Page_111'>111</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Doctor'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Doctor,
- <ul>
- <li><i>see</i> <a href='#Apothecaries'>Apothecaries</a>, <a href='#Barber-surgeons'>Barber-surgeons</a>, <a href='#Physicians'>Physicians</a>, <a href='#Midwifery'>Midwifery</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Domestic-Industry'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Domestic Industry, <a href='#Page_4'>4</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_8'>8</a>, <a href='#Page_40'>40</a>, <a href='#Page_47'>47</a>-<a href='#Page_49'>49</a>, <a href='#Page_151'>151</a>, <a href='#Page_210'>210</a>, <a href='#Page_254'>254</a>, <a href='#Page_302'>302</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>see</i> <a href='#Bakers'>Baking</a>, <a href='#Brewing'>Brewers</a>, <a href='#Capitalism'>Capitalism</a>, <a href='#Dairy'>Dairy</a>, <a href='#noentry'>Family</a> <a href='#Industry'>Industry</a>, <a href='#Servants'>Servants</a>, <a href='#Spinning'>Spinning</a>, <a href='#Brewing'>Textile</a> <a href='#Trades'>Trades</a>;</li>
- <li><i>definition of</i>, <a href='#Page_4'>4</a>-<a href='#Page_6'>6</a> <i>passim</i>;</li>
- <li><i>drudgery performed by servants</i>, <a href='#Page_156'>156</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_294'>294</a>, <a href='#Page_304'>304</a>;</li>
- <li><i>effect on women’s economic position</i>, <a href='#Page_145'>145</a>, <a href='#Page_290'>290</a>, <a href='#Page_292'>292</a>;</li>
- <li><i>girls’ work</i>, <a href='#Page_11'>11</a> <i>seq.</i>;</li>
- <li><i>men’s work</i>, <a href='#Page_5'>5</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Dorchester'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Dorchester, <a href='#Page_132'>132</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_185'>185</a>, <a href='#Page_200'>200</a>, <a href='#Page_217'>217</a>, <a href='#Page_261'>261</a>, <a href='#Page_263'>263</a> <i>seq.</i></li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Drapers'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Drapers, <a href='#Page_184'>184</a>, <a href='#Page_200'>200</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>see</i> Gild.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'>Dunning, Richard, <a href='#Page_132'>132</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Dyer'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Dyer, <a href='#Page_111'>111</a>, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>of leather</i>, <a href='#Page_158'>158</a>;</li>
- <li><i>in Ireland</i>, <a href='#Page_18'>18</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c001'><a id='Education'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Education, <a href='#Page_36'>36</a>, <a href='#Page_242'>242</a>, <a href='#Page_286'>286</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_295'>295</a>, <a href='#Page_302'>302</a>-<a href='#Page_306'>306</a> <i>passim</i>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>see</i> <a href='#Apprentice'>Apprentice</a>, <a href='#Children'>Children</a>, <a href='#Mother'>Mother</a>, <a href='#Poor'>Poor Relief</a>, <a href='#Teaching'>Teaching</a>;</li>
- <li><i>arithmetic unnecessary for girls</i>, <a href='#Page_52'>52</a>;</li>
- <li><i>industrial</i>, <a href='#Page_71'>71</a>, <a href='#Page_130'>130</a>-<a href='#Page_135'>135</a> <i>passim</i>;</li>
- <li><span class='pageno' id='Page_327'>327</span><i>influence of domestic and family industry</i>, <a href='#Page_40'>40</a>;</li>
- <li><i>institutions</i>, <a href='#Page_239'>239</a>;</li>
- <li><i>medical</i>, <a href='#Page_255'>255</a>, <a href='#Page_288'>288</a>;</li>
- <li><i>nurses</i>, <a href='#Page_249'>249</a>;</li>
- <li><i>want of specialised training for girls</i>, <a href='#Page_243'>243</a>, <a href='#Page_288'>288</a>, <a href='#Page_301'>301</a>, <a href='#Page_304'>304</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'>Embroiderer, <a href='#Page_184'>184</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Elizabethan Period, Women of, <a href='#Page_2'>2</a>, <a href='#Page_3'>3</a>, <a href='#Page_9'>9</a>, <a href='#Page_38'>38</a>, <a href='#Page_41'>41</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Estate Management, <a href='#Page_14'>14</a>, <a href='#Page_15'>15</a>, <a href='#Page_17'>17</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Evelyn, John, <a href='#Page_115'>115</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Everenden, <a href='#Page_62'>62</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Executrix, <a href='#Page_39'>39</a>, <a href='#Page_188'>188</a>, <a href='#Page_293'>293</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Exeter'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Exeter, <a href='#Page_206'>206</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Eyre, Adam, <a href='#Page_54'>54</a>.</li>
- <li class='c001'><a id='Farmer'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Farmer, <a href='#Page_42'>42</a>-<a href='#Page_56'>56</a> <i>passim</i>, <a href='#Page_108'>108</a>, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>see</i> <a href='#Agriculture'>Agriculture</a>, <a href='#Capitalism'>Capitalism</a>;</li>
- <li><i>definition of</i>, <a href='#Page_43'>43</a>;</li>
- <li><i>demand for labour</i>, <a href='#Page_81'>81</a>, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a>, <a href='#Page_90'>90</a>, <a href='#Page_91'>91</a>;</li>
- <li><i>finds sureties for married labourers</i>, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a> <i>seq.</i>;</li>
- <li><i>preference for unmarried labourers</i>, <a href='#Page_12'>12</a>;</li>
- <li><i>wife’s occupation</i>, <a href='#Page_46'>46</a>-<a href='#Page_50'>50</a> <i>passim</i>, <a href='#Page_111'>111</a>, <a href='#Page_112'>112</a>;</li>
- <li><i>women’s characteristics</i>, <a href='#Page_43'>43</a> <i>seq.</i></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'>Farrier, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Father'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Father, <a href='#Page_39'>39</a>, <a href='#Page_45'>45</a>, <a href='#Page_56'>56</a>, <a href='#Page_79'>79</a>, <a href='#Page_86'>86</a>, <a href='#Page_145'>145</a>, <a href='#Page_237'>237</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>deserts starving family</i>, <a href='#Page_118'>118</a>, <a href='#Page_148'>148</a>;</li>
- <li><i>head of family</i>, <a href='#Page_6'>6</a>, <a href='#Page_300'>300</a>;</li>
- <li><i>interest in children</i>, <a href='#Page_5'>5</a>, <a href='#Page_54'>54</a>, <a href='#Page_160'>160</a>, <a href='#Page_295'>295</a>;</li>
- <li><i>profits of family industry vested in father</i>, <a href='#Page_6'>6</a>, <a href='#Page_7'>7</a>, <a href='#Page_182'>182</a>, <a href='#Page_294'>294</a>, <a href='#Page_299'>299</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'>Falkland, The Lady, <a href='#Page_18'>18</a>-<a href='#Page_20'>20</a> <i>passim</i>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Falkland, The Lady Letice, <a href='#Page_241'>241</a>, <a href='#Page_251'>251</a>, <a href='#Page_256'>256</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Family, <a href='#Page_73'>73</a>, <a href='#Page_80'>80</a>, <a href='#Page_100'>100</a>, <a href='#Page_106'>106</a>, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a>, <a href='#Page_144'>144</a>, <a href='#Page_204'>204</a>, <a href='#Page_219'>219</a>, <a href='#Page_242'>242</a>, <a href='#Page_286'>286</a>, <a href='#Page_291'>291</a>, <a href='#Page_294'>294</a>, <a href='#Page_299'>299</a>, <a href='#Page_304'>304</a>, <a href='#Page_307'>307</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>see</i> <a href='#Business'>Business</a>, <a href='#Capitalism'>Capitalism</a>, <a href='#Father'>Father</a>, <a href='#Mother'>Mother</a>, <a href='#Wages'>Wages</a>, <a href='#Wage-earner'>Wage-earners</a>, <a href='#Widow'>Widow</a>, <a href='#Wife'>Wife</a>;</li>
- <li><i>basis of social organisation</i>, <a href='#Page_285'>285</a>, <a href='#Page_288'>288</a>, <a href='#Page_290'>290</a>, <a href='#Page_299'>299</a> <i>seq.</i>;</li>
- <li><i>chargeable to Parish</i>, <a href='#Page_80'>80</a>-<a href='#Page_88'>88</a> <i>passim</i>, <a href='#Page_134'>134</a>, <a href='#Page_142'>142</a>, <a href='#Page_146'>146</a>, <a href='#Page_204'>204</a>;</li>
- <li><i>dependence on wages</i>, <a href='#Page_43'>43</a>, <a href='#Page_56'>56</a>, <a href='#Page_178'>178</a>;</li>
- <li><i>see</i> <a href='#Husbandman'>Husbandmen</a>, <a href='#Wage-earner'>Wage-earners</a>;</li>
- <li><i>size of</i>, <a href='#Page_86'>86</a> <i>seq.</i>;</li>
- <li><i>traditions lost</i>, <a href='#Page_118'>118</a>, <a href='#Page_148'>148</a>, <a href='#Page_237'>237</a>, <a href='#Page_287'>287</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'>Family Industry, <a href='#Page_6'>6</a>-<a href='#Page_11'>11</a> <i>passim</i>, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a>, <a href='#Page_94'>94</a>, <a href='#Page_96'>96</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_102'>102</a>, <a href='#Page_142'>142</a>, <a href='#Page_151'>151</a>, <a href='#Page_156'>156</a>, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a>, <a href='#Page_192'>192</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_196'>196</a>, <a href='#Page_216'>216</a>, <a href='#Page_234'>234</a>, <a href='#Page_290'>290</a>, <a href='#Page_297'>297</a>, <a href='#Page_301'>301</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_305'>305</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>see</i> <a href='#Capitalism'>Capitalism</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'>Fanshawe, Lady, <a href='#Page_22'>22</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Fell'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Fell, Sarah, <a href='#Page_17'>17</a>, <a href='#Page_51'>51</a>, <a href='#Page_255'>255</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Feltmaker, <a href='#Page_190'>190</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Fiennes, Celia, <a href='#Page_62'>62</a>, <a href='#Page_73'>73</a>, <a href='#Page_124'>124</a>, <a href='#Page_233'>233</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Firmin, Thomas, <a href='#Page_135'>135</a>-<a href='#Page_137'>137</a> <i>passim</i>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Fishmonger, <a href='#Page_219'>219</a> <i>seq.</i></li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Fishwives'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Fishwives, <a href='#Page_36'>36</a>, <a href='#Page_209'>209</a>, <a href='#Page_219'>219</a>-<a href='#Page_221'>221</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>oyster wives</i>, <a href='#Page_202'>202</a>, <a href='#Page_220'>220</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'>Fitzherbert, Sir Anthony, <a href='#Page_46'>46</a>-<a href='#Page_50'>50</a>, <a href='#Page_129'>129</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'><span class='pageno' id='Page_328'>328</span><a id='Flax'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Flax, <a href='#Page_64'>64</a>, <a href='#Page_146'>146</a>, <a href='#Page_246'>246</a>, <a href='#Page_291'>291</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>sowing</i>, <a href='#Page_40'>40</a>, <a href='#Page_48'>48</a>, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'>Foulis, Sir John, <a href='#Page_32'>32</a>, <a href='#Page_280'>280</a> <i>seq.</i></li>
- <li class='c054'>Foreign Women, <i>Dutch merchants</i>, <a href='#Page_36'>36</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_219'>219</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>Flanders, workers of woollen cloths</i>, <a href='#Page_103'>103</a>;</li>
- <li><i>French midwives</i>, <a href='#Page_268'>268</a>, <a href='#Page_275'>275</a>, <a href='#Page_284'>284</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Fullers'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Fullers, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a>, <a href='#Page_145'>145</a>, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a>, <a href='#Page_157'>157</a>, <a href='#Page_189'>189</a>.</li>
- <li class='c001'>Garden, <i>women’s sphere</i>, <a href='#Page_5'>5</a>, <a href='#Page_9'>9</a>, <a href='#Page_48'>48</a>, <a href='#Page_50'>50</a>, <a href='#Page_53'>53</a>, <a href='#Page_292'>292</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Gardiner, Lady, <a href='#Page_15'>15</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Gilds'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Gilds, <a href='#Page_10'>10</a>, <a href='#Page_141'>141</a>, <a href='#Page_150'>150</a>, <a href='#Page_154'>154</a>-<a href='#Page_156'>156</a> <i>passim</i>, <a href='#Page_192'>192</a>, <a href='#Page_196'>196</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>see</i> <a href='#Apprentice'>Apprentice</a>, <a href='#Capitalism'>Capitalism</a>, <a href='#Companies'>Companies</a>, <a href='#Journeyman'>Journeyman</a>, <a href='#Wife'>Wife</a>;</li>
- <li><i>admission to</i>, <a href='#Page_160'>160</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_176'>176</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_179'>179</a>, <a href='#Page_191'>191</a>;</li>
- <li><i>charters</i>, <a href='#Page_140'>140</a>, <a href='#Page_160'>160</a>, <a href='#Page_178'>178</a>, <a href='#Page_181'>181</a>-<a href='#Page_183'>183</a> <i>passim</i>; <a href='#Page_187'>187</a>, <a href='#Page_259'>259</a>;</li>
- <li><i>development into Companies</i>, <a href='#Page_158'>158</a>;</li>
- <li><i>functions, religious, social and for trade purposes</i>, <a href='#Page_154'>154</a>, <a href='#Page_160'>160</a>, <a href='#Page_171'>171</a>-<a href='#Page_181'>181</a> <i>passim</i>;</li>
- <li><i>revilings</i>, <a href='#Page_172'>172</a>, <a href='#Page_182'>182</a>, <a href='#Page_183'>183</a>;</li>
- <li><i>rules</i>, <a href='#Page_157'>157</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_179'>179</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_187'>187</a>;</li>
- <li><i>women’s position in</i>, <a href='#Page_150'>150</a>, <a href='#Page_154'>154</a>-<a href='#Page_191'>191</a> <i>passim</i>;</li>
- <li><i>in woman’s trade</i>, <a href='#Page_195'>195</a> <i>seq.</i></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Girdlers'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Girdlers, <a href='#Page_185'>185</a>, <a href='#Page_189'>189</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>see</i> <a href='#Companies'>Companies</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'>Glass-sellers, <a href='#Page_187'>187</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>see</i> <a href='#Companies'>Companies</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Glovers'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Glovers, <a href='#Page_181'>181</a>, <a href='#Page_185'>185</a>, <a href='#Page_191'>191</a> <i>seq.</i>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>see</i> <a href='#Companies'>Companies</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Gold'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Gold and Silver Thread, <a href='#Page_26'>26</a>, <a href='#Page_143'>143</a>-<a href='#Page_145'>145</a> <i>passim</i>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>pauper trade</i>, <a href='#Page_145'>145</a> <i>seq.</i></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Goldsmith'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Goldsmith, <a href='#Page_184'>184</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>see</i> <a href='#Companies'>Companies</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'>Gold-wire Drawers;
- <ul>
- <li><i>see</i> <a href='#Gold'>Gold and Silver Thread</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Grimsby'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Grimsby, <a href='#Page_31'>31</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Grocers'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Grocers, <a href='#Page_179'>179</a>, <a href='#Page_184'>184</a>, <a href='#Page_201'>201</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_260'>260</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>see</i> <a href='#Companies'>Companies</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c001'><a id='Haberdasher'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Haberdasher, <a href='#Page_200'>200</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Hale, Sir Matthew, <a href='#Page_79'>79</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Harber, Sylvia, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a> <i>seq.</i></li>
- <li class='c054'>Harley, Brilliana Lady, <a href='#Page_15'>15</a> <i>seq.</i></li>
- <li class='c054'>Harley, Sir E., <a href='#Page_16'>16</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Harrowing, <a href='#Page_87'>87</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Hawkers'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Hawkers, <a href='#Page_204'>204</a>-<a href='#Page_207'>207</a> <i>passim</i>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Hay-making, <a href='#Page_49'>49</a>, <a href='#Page_62'>62</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Hellyard, Elizabeth, <a href='#Page_34'>34</a> <i>seq.</i></li>
- <li class='c054'>Heylyn, Peter, <a href='#Page_54'>54</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_239'>239</a>, <a href='#Page_278'>278</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Heywood, Oliver, <a href='#Page_87'>87</a>, <a href='#Page_129'>129</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Hobbes, <a href='#Page_258'>258</a>, <a href='#Page_303'>303</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Holroyd, Joseph, <a href='#Page_30'>30</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Home, <a href='#Page_4'>4</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>see</i> <a href='#Industrial-Revolution'>Industrial Revolution</a>;</li>
- <li><i>includes workshop</i>, <a href='#Page_7'>7</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_156'>156</a>-<a href='#Page_160'>160</a> <i>passim</i>, <a href='#Page_294'>294</a>;</li>
- <li><i>men’s sphere as well as women’s</i>, <a href='#Page_303'>303</a>;</li>
- <li><i>opportunities for production in home</i>, <a href='#Page_147'>147</a>;</li>
- <li><i>wage-earners work away from home</i>, <a href='#Page_296'>296</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'>Howell, James, <a href='#Page_37'>37</a>, <a href='#Page_53'>53</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'><span class='pageno' id='Page_329'>329</span><a id='Hospitals'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Hospitals, <a href='#Page_243'>243</a>-<a href='#Page_249'>249</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>see</i> <a href='#Nurse'>Nurses</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Household'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Household, <i>accounts</i>, <a href='#Page_17'>17</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>affairs</i>, <a href='#Page_157'>157</a>;</li>
- <li><i>of craftsmen</i>, <a href='#Page_158'>158</a> <i>seq.</i>;</li>
- <li><i>size of</i>, <a href='#Page_15'>15</a>, <a href='#Page_50'>50</a>, <a href='#Page_99'>99</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Housing'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Housing, <a href='#Page_73'>73</a>-<a href='#Page_81'>81</a> <i>passim</i>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Huckster, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Hull'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Hull, <a href='#Page_30'>30</a>, <a href='#Page_212'>212</a> <i>seq.</i></li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Husband'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Husband, <a href='#Page_10'>10</a>, <a href='#Page_12'>12</a>, <a href='#Page_15'>15</a>, <a href='#Page_17'>17</a>, <a href='#Page_18'>18</a>, <a href='#Page_20'>20</a>, <a href='#Page_22'>22</a>-<a href='#Page_24'>24</a> <i>passim</i>, <a href='#Page_34'>34</a>, <a href='#Page_39'>39</a>, <a href='#Page_46'>46</a>, <a href='#Page_49'>49</a>, <a href='#Page_88'>88</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_95'>95</a>, <a href='#Page_118'>118</a>, <a href='#Page_171'>171</a>-<a href='#Page_173'>173</a> <i>passim</i>, <a href='#Page_212'>212</a>, <a href='#Page_228'>228</a>, <a href='#Page_233'>233</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_240'>240</a>, <a href='#Page_306'>306</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>see</i> <a href='#Wife'>Wife</a>;</li>
- <li><i>acquires wife’s rights</i>, <a href='#Page_161'>161</a>, <a href='#Page_213'>213</a>;</li>
- <li><i>assists wife</i>, <a href='#Page_199'>199</a>, <a href='#Page_214'>214</a>, <a href='#Page_301'>301</a>;</li>
- <li><i>companionship with wife</i>, <a href='#Page_160'>160</a>, <a href='#Page_183'>183</a>, <a href='#Page_301'>301</a>-<a href='#Page_303'>303</a> <i>passim</i>, <a href='#Page_306'>306</a>;</li>
- <li><i>dependence on wife’s assistance</i>, <a href='#Page_16'>16</a>, <a href='#Page_36'>36</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_46'>46</a>, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a>, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a>, <a href='#Page_194'>194</a>, <a href='#Page_196'>196</a>, <a href='#Page_211'>211</a>;</li>
- <li><i>ill-treatment of wife</i>, <a href='#Page_191'>191</a>;</li>
- <li><i>independence of wife</i>, <a href='#Page_41'>41</a>, <a href='#Page_197'>197</a>;</li>
- <li><i>meddles not with wife’s trade</i>, <a href='#Page_231'>231</a> <i>seq.</i>;</li>
- <li><i>not responsible for wife’s debts</i>, <a href='#Page_151'>151</a> <i>seq.</i></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Husbandman'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Husbandman, <a href='#Page_3'>3</a>, <a href='#Page_56'>56</a>-<a href='#Page_64'>64</a> <i>passim</i>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>definition of</i>, <a href='#Page_43'>43</a>, <a href='#Page_57'>57</a>;</li>
- <li><i>girls’ environment</i>, <a href='#Page_87'>87</a>;</li>
- <li><i>independence</i>, <a href='#Page_56'>56</a>;</li>
- <li><i>rent</i>, <a href='#Page_57'>57</a>;</li>
- <li><i>wages</i>, <i>men</i>, <a href='#Page_59'>59</a>-<a href='#Page_62'>62</a> <i>passim</i>, <i>women</i>, <a href='#Page_60'>60</a>-<a href='#Page_63'>63</a> <i>passim</i>;</li>
- <li><i>wife’s occupation</i>, <a href='#Page_60'>60</a>-<a href='#Page_64'>64</a> <i>passim</i>, <a href='#Page_111'>111</a> <i>seq.</i>;</li>
- <li><i>wife as wet-nurse</i>, <a href='#Page_58'>58</a>;</li>
- <li><i>women’s characteristics</i>, <a href='#Page_58'>58</a> <i>seq.</i></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'>Hutchinson, Mrs. Lucy, <a href='#Page_23'>23</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_255'>255</a>, <a href='#Page_263'>263</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Hutchinson, Colonel, <a href='#Page_23'>23</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_252'>252</a>.</li>
- <li class='c001'>Keeper of tenis court, <a href='#Page_25'>25</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>King, Gregory, <a href='#Page_55'>55</a>, <a href='#Page_80'>80</a>, <a href='#Page_86'>86</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Kingston-upon-Hull, <a href='#Page_103'>103</a>, <a href='#Page_181'>181</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Knitting, <a href='#Page_18'>18</a>, <a href='#Page_26'>26</a>, <a href='#Page_133'>133</a>.</li>
- <li class='c001'>Idleness, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a>, <a href='#Page_253'>253</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Industrialism, <a href='#Page_94'>94</a>, <a href='#Page_123'>123</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>see</i> <a href='#Capitalism'>Capitalism</a>;</li>
- <li><i>attempted introduction of factory system</i>, <a href='#Page_99'>99</a>, <a href='#Page_124'>124</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Industrial-Revolution'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Industrial Revolution, <a href='#Page_8'>8</a> <i>seq.</i></li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Industry'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Industry;
- <ul>
- <li><i>see</i> <a href='#Domestic-Industry'>Domestic</a>, <a href='#noentry'>Family</a>, <a href='#Capitalism'>Capitalism</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Infant-Mortality'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Infant Mortality, <a href='#Page_58'>58</a>, <a href='#Page_86'>86</a>, <a href='#Page_273'>273</a>, <a href='#Page_276'>276</a>, <a href='#Page_283'>283</a>, <a href='#Page_305'>305</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Inn-keeper'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Inn-keeper, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a>, <a href='#Page_209'>209</a>, <a href='#Page_213'>213</a>, <a href='#Page_225'>225</a>, <a href='#Page_227'>227</a>, <a href='#Page_233'>233</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Insurance Office, <a href='#Page_33'>33</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Ireland'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Ireland, <a href='#Page_18'>18</a>, <a href='#Page_126'>126</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Ironmonger, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a>.</li>
- <li class='c001'><a id='Joiners'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Joiners, <a href='#Page_181'>181</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>see</i> <a href='#Companies'>Companies</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'>Jonson, Ben, <a href='#Page_28'>28</a>, <a href='#Page_257'>257</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Josselin, the Rev. R., <a href='#Page_50'>50</a>, <a href='#Page_257'>257</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Journeyman'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Journeyman, <a href='#Page_156'>156</a>, <a href='#Page_159'>159</a>, <a href='#Page_180'>180</a>, <a href='#Page_212'>212</a>, <a href='#Page_297'>297</a> <i>seq.</i>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>see</i> <a href='#Widow'>Widow</a>;</li>
- <li><i>employed by women</i>, <a href='#Page_174'>174</a>, <a href='#Page_185'>185</a>, <a href='#Page_189'>189</a>, <a href='#Page_261'>261</a>;</li>
- <li><span class='pageno' id='Page_330'>330</span><i>organisation of</i>, <a href='#Page_10'>10</a>, <a href='#Page_166'>166</a>;</li>
- <li><i>wives and daughters excluded</i>, <a href='#Page_10'>10</a>, <a href='#Page_166'>166</a>, <a href='#Page_197'>197</a>, <a href='#Page_234'>234</a>, <a href='#Page_298'>298</a>, <a href='#Page_301'>301</a>;</li>
- <li><i>wife unpaid servant</i>, <a href='#Page_10'>10</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Labourer'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Labourer, <i>see</i> <a href='#Farmer'>Farmer</a>, <a href='#Husbandman'>Husbandman</a>, <a href='#Wage-earner'>Wage earner</a>, <a href='#Wages'>Wages</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Laundry, <i>maid</i>, <a href='#Page_50'>50</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>work</i>, <a href='#Page_5'>5</a>, <a href='#Page_13'>13</a>, <a href='#Page_49'>49</a>, <a href='#Page_135'>135</a>, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Law'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Law, <a href='#Page_236'>236</a> <i>seq.</i></li>
- <li class='c054'>Lace, <i>see</i> <a href='#Ireland'>Ireland</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>bone-lace</i>, <a href='#Page_142'>142</a>, <a href='#Page_144'>144</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Leather-sellers'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Leather-sellers, <a href='#Page_158'>158</a>, <a href='#Page_185'>185</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>see</i> <a href='#Companies'>Companies</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Leicester'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Leicester, <a href='#Page_210'>210</a>, <a href='#Page_222'>222</a> <i>seq.</i></li>
- <li class='c054'>Leland, <a href='#Page_99'>99</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Lincoln'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Lincoln, <a href='#Page_157'>157</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Linen-manufacture'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Linen manufacture, <a href='#Page_94'>94</a>, <a href='#Page_96'>96</a>, <a href='#Page_124'>124</a>-<a href='#Page_137'>137</a> <i>passim</i>, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>see</i> <a href='#Drapers'>Drapers</a>, <a href='#Flax'>Flax</a>, <a href='#Poor'>Poor</a>, <a href='#Spinning'>Spinning</a>, <a href='#Weaver'>Weaving</a>;</li>
- <li><i>appropriateness to women</i>, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a> <i>seq.</i>;</li>
- <li><i>capitalistic</i>, <a href='#Page_124'>124</a>, <a href='#Page_136'>136</a>;</li>
- <li><i>company</i>, <a href='#Page_126'>126</a>-<a href='#Page_128'>128</a> <i>passim</i>, <a href='#Page_136'>136</a>;</li>
- <li><i>domestic</i>, <a href='#Page_5'>5</a>, <a href='#Page_40'>40</a>, <a href='#Page_48'>48</a>, <a href='#Page_96'>96</a>, <a href='#Page_125'>125</a>, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a>, <a href='#Page_129'>129</a>, <a href='#Page_137'>137</a>;</li>
- <li><i>family</i>, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a>;</li>
- <li><i>in Ireland</i>, <a href='#Page_126'>126</a> <i>seq.</i>;</li>
- <li><i>printers</i>, <a href='#Page_126'>126</a>;</li>
- <li><i>in Scotland</i>, <a href='#Page_126'>126</a>, <a href='#Page_129'>129</a>;</li>
- <li><i>wages for spinning</i>, <a href='#Page_48'>48</a>, <a href='#Page_95'>95</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a>-<a href='#Page_137'>137</a> <i>passim</i>, <a href='#Page_146'>146</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='London'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>London, <a href='#Page_29'>29</a>, <a href='#Page_31'>31</a>, <a href='#Page_33'>33</a>, <a href='#Page_131'>131</a>, <a href='#Page_135'>135</a>, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a>-<a href='#Page_141'>141</a> <i>passim</i>, <a href='#Page_152'>152</a>, <a href='#Page_158'>158</a>-<a href='#Page_195'>195</a> <i>passim</i>, <a href='#Page_202'>202</a>, <a href='#Page_206'>206</a>, <a href='#Page_208'>208</a>, <a href='#Page_217'>217</a>, <a href='#Page_220'>220</a>, <a href='#Page_233'>233</a>, <a href='#Page_243'>243</a>-<a href='#Page_249'>249</a> <i>passim</i>, <a href='#Page_258'>258</a>-<a href='#Page_263'>263</a> <i>passim</i>, <a href='#Page_281'>281</a>.</li>
- <li class='c001'><a id='Malt-making'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Malt-making, <a href='#Page_47'>47</a>, <a href='#Page_49'>49</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_224'>224</a>-<a href='#Page_226'>226</a> <i>passim</i>.</li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Manchester'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Manchester, <a href='#Page_206'>206</a>, <a href='#Page_213'>213</a>, <a href='#Page_218'>218</a>, <a href='#Page_221'>221</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Mansell, Lady, <a href='#Page_35'>35</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Mantua-making, <a href='#Page_195'>195</a>, <a href='#Page_234'>234</a>, <a href='#Page_293'>293</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Marriage'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Marriage, <a href='#Page_191'>191</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>see</i> <a href='#Poor'>Poor relief</a>, <a href='#Wife'>Wife</a>, <a href='#Mother'>Mother</a>;</li>
- <li><i>confers woman’s rights on her husband</i>, <a href='#Page_261'>261</a>;</li>
- <li><i>strengthens man’s economic position</i>, <a href='#Page_39'>39</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'>Married Woman;
- <ul>
- <li><i>see</i>, <a href='#Mother'>Mother</a>, <a href='#Wife'>Wife</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Market'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Market, <a href='#Page_4'>4</a>, <a href='#Page_119'>119</a>, <a href='#Page_202'>202</a>, <a href='#Page_204'>204</a>, <a href='#Page_217'>217</a>, <a href='#Page_291'>291</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>corn-market</i>, <a href='#Page_211'>211</a>;</li>
- <li><i>Farmer’s wife attends market</i>, <a href='#Page_49'>49</a>-<a href='#Page_51'>51</a>;</li>
- <li><i>labour market</i>, <a href='#Page_145'>145</a>, <a href='#Page_167'>167</a>, <a href='#Page_298'>298</a>;</li>
- <li><i>price of spinning</i>, <a href='#Page_129'>129</a>;</li>
- <li><i>market spinner</i>, <a href='#Page_107'>107</a>, <a href='#Page_109'>109</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_113'>113</a>;</li>
- <li><i>town</i>, <a href='#Page_224'>224</a> <i>seq.</i>;</li>
- <li><i>thread, yarn and wool, sold in market</i>, <a href='#Page_107'>107</a>-<a href='#Page_109'>109</a> <i>passim</i>, <a href='#Page_112'>112</a>, <a href='#Page_127'>127</a> <i>seq.</i>;</li>
- <li><i>woman</i>, <a href='#Page_135'>135</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'>Martindale, Adam, <a href='#Page_55'>55</a>, <a href='#Page_257'>257</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>McMath, James, <a href='#Page_267'>267</a>, <a href='#Page_282'>282</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Medicine'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Medicine, <a href='#Page_242'>242</a>, <a href='#Page_253'>253</a>-<a href='#Page_265'>265</a> <i>passim</i>, <a href='#Page_286'>286</a>, <a href='#Page_288'>288</a>, <a href='#Page_294'>294</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>see</i> <a href='#Poor'>Poor</a>, <a href='#Servants'>Servants</a>;</li>
- <li><i>domestic practice</i>, <a href='#Page_242'>242</a>, <a href='#Page_254'>254</a>-<a href='#Page_257'>257</a> <i>passim</i>;</li>
- <li><i>education of women</i>, <a href='#Page_255'>255</a>, <a href='#Page_294'>294</a>;</li>
- <li><i>their exclusion from schools</i>, <a href='#Page_254'>254</a>, <a href='#Page_265'>265</a>, <a href='#Page_294'>294</a>;</li>
- <li><span class='pageno' id='Page_331'>331</span><i>fees</i>, <a href='#Page_262'>262</a>, <a href='#Page_264'>264</a>;</li>
- <li><i>Licensed by Bishop</i>, <a href='#Page_276'>276</a>;</li>
- <li><i>professional practice</i>, <a href='#Page_242'>242</a>, <a href='#Page_254'>254</a>, <a href='#Page_257'>257</a>-<a href='#Page_259'>259</a> <i>passim</i>, <a href='#Page_263'>263</a> <i>seq.</i>;</li>
- <li><i>restrictions on women</i>, <a href='#Page_259'>259</a> <i>seq.</i>;</li>
- <li><i>women’s skill extended to neighbours</i>, <a href='#Page_255'>255</a>-<a href='#Page_257'>257</a> <i>passim</i>, <a href='#Page_294'>294</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Mercers'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Mercers, <a href='#Page_184'>184</a>, <a href='#Page_201'>201</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Merchant'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Merchant, <a href='#Page_29'>29</a>, <a href='#Page_36'>36</a>, <a href='#Page_140'>140</a>, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a>, <a href='#Page_180'>180</a>-<a href='#Page_184'>184</a> <i>passim</i>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>see</i> <a href='#noentry'>Joan Dant</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'>Middle-man, <a href='#Page_110'>110</a>, <a href='#Page_124'>124</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>see</i> <a href='#Market'>Market spinner</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Midwife'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Midwife, <a href='#Page_258'>258</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>see</i> <a href='#Midwifery'>Midwifery</a>;</li>
- <li><i>Baptism by</i>, <a href='#Page_277'>277</a>-<a href='#Page_279'>279</a> <i>passim</i>;</li>
- <li><i>Fees</i>, <a href='#Page_268'>268</a>, <a href='#Page_279'>279</a>-<a href='#Page_281'>281</a> <i>passim</i>;</li>
- <li><i>Licences</i>, <a href='#Page_272'>272</a>-<a href='#Page_279'>279</a> <i>passim</i>;</li>
- <li><i>Man-midwife</i>, <a href='#Page_265'>265</a>, <a href='#Page_271'>271</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_284'>284</a>;</li>
- <li><i>Prosecutions of</i>, <a href='#Page_279'>279</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Midwifery'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Midwifery, <a href='#Page_242'>242</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_265'>265</a>-<a href='#Page_285'>285</a>, <a href='#Page_288'>288</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>see</i> <a href='#Midwife'>Midwife</a>;</li>
- <li><i>chiefly professional</i>, <a href='#Page_265'>265</a>;</li>
- <li><i>doctor’s assistance</i>, <a href='#Page_271'>271</a>, <a href='#Page_280'>280</a>-<a href='#Page_284'>284</a> <i>passim</i>;</li>
- <li><i>French</i>, <a href='#Page_268'>268</a>, <a href='#Page_275'>275</a>, <a href='#Page_279'>279</a>, <a href='#Page_284'>284</a>;</li>
- <li><i>training of women</i> for, <a href='#Page_269'>269</a>-<a href='#Page_275'>275</a> <i>passim</i>, <a href='#Page_288'>288</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Milking'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Milking, <a href='#Page_47'>47</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Mill, <a href='#Page_47'>47</a>, <a href='#Page_210'>210</a>, <a href='#Page_215'>215</a> <i>seq.</i></li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Miller'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Miller, <a href='#Page_209'>209</a>, <a href='#Page_212'>212</a>, <a href='#Page_215'>215</a> <i>seq.</i>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>wages of</i>, <a href='#Page_66'>66</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'>Milliner, <a href='#Page_176'>176</a>, <a href='#Page_195'>195</a>, <a href='#Page_234'>234</a>, <a href='#Page_293'>293</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Milton, John, <a href='#Page_240'>240</a>, <a href='#Page_304'>304</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Money-lender'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Money-lender, <a href='#Page_28'>28</a> <i>seq.</i>,
- <ul>
- <li><i>see</i> <a href='#noentry'>Pawnbroker</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'>Monopolies and patents, <a href='#Page_25'>25</a>-<a href='#Page_28'>28</a> <i>passim</i>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Moore, Rev. Giles, <a href='#Page_252'>252</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Mother'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Mother, <a href='#Page_43'>43</a>, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_73'>73</a>, <a href='#Page_125'>125</a>, <a href='#Page_196'>196</a>, <a href='#Page_198'>198</a>, <a href='#Page_214'>214</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>see</i> <a href='#Capitalism'>Capitalism</a>, <a href='#Domestic-Industry'>Domestic Industry</a>, <a href='#Spinning'>Spinning</a>, <a href='#Wages'>Wages</a>, <a href='#Widow'>Widow</a>, <a href='#Wife'>Wife</a>;</li>
- <li><i>desertion of children</i>, <a href='#Page_86'>86</a>;</li>
- <li><i>educating children</i>, <a href='#Page_21'>21</a>, <a href='#Page_95'>95</a>, <a href='#Page_159'>159</a>, <a href='#Page_242'>242</a>, <a href='#Page_286'>286</a>, <a href='#Page_295'>295</a>;</li>
- <li><i>head of family</i>, <a href='#Page_7'>7</a>, <a href='#Page_234'>234</a>, <a href='#Page_300'>300</a>;</li>
- <li><i>sharing father’s work</i>, <a href='#Page_6'>6</a> <i>seq.</i>;</li>
- <li><i>supporting family</i>, <a href='#Page_12'>12</a>, <a href='#Page_29'>29</a>, <a href='#Page_55'>55</a>, <a href='#Page_64'>64</a>, <a href='#Page_78'>78</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_114'>114</a>, <a href='#Page_178'>178</a>, <a href='#Page_192'>192</a>-<a href='#Page_194'>194</a> <i>passim</i>, <a href='#Page_198'>198</a>;</li>
- <li><i>tending children</i>, <a href='#Page_47'>47</a>, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a>, <a href='#Page_95'>95</a>;</li>
- <li><i>under-feeding</i>, <a href='#Page_87'>87</a>-<a href='#Page_89'>89</a> <i>passim</i>, <a href='#Page_306'>306</a>;</li>
- <li><i>value of productive activity</i>, <a href='#Page_145'>145</a>, <a href='#Page_290'>290</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_304'>304</a>;</li>
- <li><i>worship of</i>, <a href='#Page_238'>238</a> <i>seq.</i></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Motherhood'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Motherhood, women’s capacity for, <a href='#Page_8'>8</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_58'>58</a>, <a href='#Page_87'>87</a>, <a href='#Page_305'>305</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Murray, Lady, <a href='#Page_16'>16</a>.</li>
- <li class='c001'>Needlework, <a href='#Page_13'>13</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Netmaker, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Newcastle-upon-Tyne'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Newcastle-upon-Tyne, <a href='#Page_34'>34</a>, <a href='#Page_226'>226</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Nicholson, Dame Margaret, <a href='#Page_60'>60</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Norwich'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Norwich, <a href='#Page_107'>107</a>, <a href='#Page_116'>116</a>, <a href='#Page_219'>219</a>, <a href='#Page_229'>229</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Nottingham'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Nottingham, <a href='#Page_130'>130</a>, <a href='#Page_201'>201</a>, <a href='#Page_217'>217</a>, <a href='#Page_232'>232</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Nurse'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Nurse, <i>sick</i>, <a href='#Page_13'>13</a>, <a href='#Page_135'>135</a>, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>salaries</i>, <a href='#Page_243'>243</a>-<a href='#Page_246'>246</a> <i>passim</i>, <a href='#Page_248'>248</a>, <a href='#Page_250'>250</a> <i>seq.</i></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Nursing'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'><i>Nursing</i>, <a href='#Page_242'>242</a>-<a href='#Page_253'>253</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>see</i> <a href='#Poor'>Poor</a>, <a href='#Servants'>Servants</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_332'>332</span>Ogden, Hester, <a href='#Page_164'>164</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Orphan, <i>see</i> <a href='#Children'>Children</a>, <a href='#Poor'>Poor Relief</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Osborne, Dorothy, <a href='#Page_57'>57</a>.</li>
- <li class='c001'>Painter-Stainer, <a href='#Page_188'>188</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Paper-maker, <a href='#Page_32'>32</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Pauper, <i>see</i> <a href='#Poor'>Poor</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Pawnbroker, <a href='#Page_28'>28</a> <i>seq.</i>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>see</i> <a href='#Money-lender'>Money-lender</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'>Pechey, <a href='#Page_275'>275</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Pedlar'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Pedlar, <a href='#Page_32'>32</a>, <a href='#Page_204'>204</a>-<a href='#Page_207'>207</a> <i>passim</i>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Pepys Samuel, <a href='#Page_3'>3</a>, <a href='#Page_38'>38</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_59'>59</a>, <a href='#Page_62'>62</a>, <a href='#Page_281'>281</a>, <a href='#Page_296'>296</a> <i>seq.</i></li>
- <li class='c054'>Peronne, Mme., <a href='#Page_268'>268</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Petitions'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Petitions, <i>from women</i>, <a href='#Page_23'>23</a>-<a href='#Page_27'>27</a> <i>passim</i>, <a href='#Page_118'>118</a>, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a>, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>of married woman objected to</i>, <a href='#Page_77'>77</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'>Petty, Dorothy, <a href='#Page_33'>33</a> <i>seq.</i></li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Pewterers'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Pewterers, <a href='#Page_183'>183</a>, <a href='#Page_186'>186</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_191'>191</a>, <a href='#Page_210'>210</a>, <a href='#Page_294'>294</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>see</i> <a href='#Companies'>Companies</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Physicians'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Physicians, <a href='#Page_259'>259</a>, <a href='#Page_262'>262</a>, <a href='#Page_265'>265</a>, <a href='#Page_271'>271</a>, <a href='#Page_275'>275</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_284'>284</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Politics, <i>see</i> <a href='#Petitions'>Petitions</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>women’s interest in</i>, <a href='#Page_23'>23</a> <i>seq.</i></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Pig-keeping'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Pig-keeping, <a href='#Page_5'>5</a>, <a href='#Page_48'>48</a>, <a href='#Page_52'>52</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_292'>292</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Pin-maker, <a href='#Page_193'>193</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Point-maker, <a href='#Page_191'>191</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Poor'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Poor,
- <ul>
- <li><i>see</i> <a href='#Hospitals'>Hospitals</a>, <a href='#Midwife'>Midwife</a>, <a href='#Silk'>Silk</a>, <a href='#Spinning'>Spinning</a>, <a href='#Wages'>Wages</a>, <a href='#Wage-earner'>Wage-earners</a>;</li>
- <li><i>census of</i>, <a href='#Page_219'>219</a>;</li>
- <li><i>clothiers’ poor</i>, <a href='#Page_109'>109</a>;</li>
- <li><i>confinements</i>, <a href='#Page_277'>277</a>, <a href='#Page_280'>280</a>;</li>
- <li><i>education of</i>, <a href='#Page_130'>130</a>-<a href='#Page_134'>134</a> <i>passim</i>;</li>
- <li><i>increased wages</i>, <a href='#Page_115'>115</a>;</li>
- <li><i>medical attendance</i>, <a href='#Page_255'>255</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_263'>263</a>-<a href='#Page_265'>265</a> <i>passim</i>;</li>
- <li><i>not all vagrants</i>, <a href='#Page_135'>135</a>;</li>
- <li><i>nursing</i>, <a href='#Page_243'>243</a>, <a href='#Page_251'>251</a> <i>seq.</i>;</li>
- <li><i>relief</i>, <a href='#Page_69'>69</a>-<a href='#Page_92'>92</a> <i>passim</i>, <a href='#Page_118'>118</a>, <a href='#Page_129'>129</a>-<a href='#Page_137'>137</a> <i>passim</i>, <a href='#Page_204'>204</a>;</li>
- <li><i>set on work</i>, <a href='#Page_110'>110</a>, <a href='#Page_120'>120</a>, <a href='#Page_130'>130</a>-<a href='#Page_137'>137</a> <i>passim</i>, <a href='#Page_140'>140</a>, <a href='#Page_148'>148</a>;</li>
- <li><i>synonymous with pauper</i>, <a href='#Page_148'>148</a>;</li>
- <li><i>widows and orphans maintained by parish</i>, <a href='#Page_204'>204</a>;</li>
- <li><i>workhouse</i>, <a href='#Page_72'>72</a>, <a href='#Page_131'>131</a>-<a href='#Page_134'>134</a> <i>passim</i>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Poultry-keeping'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Poultry-keeping, <a href='#Page_5'>5</a>, <a href='#Page_48'>48</a>, <a href='#Page_50'>50</a>, <a href='#Page_87'>87</a>, <a href='#Page_209'>209</a>, <a href='#Page_292'>292</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Pregnancy, <a href='#Page_24'>24</a>, <a href='#Page_72'>72</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_82'>82</a>, <a href='#Page_89'>89</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Printer, <a href='#Page_161'>161</a>-<a href='#Page_167'>167</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>see</i> <a href='#Companies'>Companies</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'>Professions, <a href='#Page_5'>5</a>, <a href='#Page_236'>236</a>-<a href='#Page_289'>289</a> <i>passim</i>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>see</i> <a href='#Church'>Church</a>, <a href='#Education'>Education</a>, <a href='#Law'>Law</a>, <a href='#Medicine'>Medicine</a>, <a href='#Midwifery'>Midwifery</a>, <a href='#Nursing'>Nursing</a>, <a href='#Teaching'>Teaching</a>;</li>
- <li><i>services</i>, <a href='#Page_4'>4</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_294'>294</a> <i>seq.</i>;</li>
- <li><i>women’s position in</i>, <a href='#Page_13'>13</a>, <a href='#Page_304'>304</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'>Projector, <a href='#Page_28'>28</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Provision Trades, <a href='#Page_150'>150</a>, <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_209'>209</a>-<a href='#Page_234'>234</a> <i>passim</i>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>see</i> <a href='#Alehouse'>Alehouse</a>, <a href='#Alewife'>Alewife</a>, <a href='#Apprentice'>Apprentice</a>, <a href='#Bakers'>Bakers</a>, <a href='#Brewing'>Brewing</a>, <a href='#Butcher'>Butcher</a>, <a href='#Fishwives'>Fishwife</a>, <a href='#Inn-keeper'>Inn-keeper</a>, <a href='#Malt-making'>Malt-making</a>, <a href='#Miller'>Miller</a>, <a href='#Retail-Trade'>Retail</a> <a href='#Trades'>Trades</a>, <a href='#Vintners'>Vintner</a>, <a href='#Wife'>Wife</a>, <a href='#Widow'>Widow</a>;</li>
- <li><i>women’s position in</i>, <a href='#Page_10'>10</a> <i>seq.</i></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'>Publisher, <a href='#Page_167'>167</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>see</i> <a href='#Companies'>Companies</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'>Pulling pease, <a href='#Page_61'>61</a> <i>seq.</i></li>
- <li class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_333'>333</span>Quakers, <a href='#Page_51'>51</a>, <a href='#Page_168'>168</a>, <a href='#Page_199'>199</a>, <a href='#Page_240'>240</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>see</i> <a href='#Fell'>Fell</a>;</li>
- <li><i>Adams (wife of John)</i>, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a>;</li>
- <li><i>Banks, (wife of John)</i>, <a href='#Page_44'>44</a>;</li>
- <li><i>Batt, Mary</i>, <a href='#Page_45'>45</a> <i>seq.</i>;</li>
- <li><i>Bownas (wife of Samuel)</i>, <a href='#Page_52'>52</a>;</li>
- <li><i>Townsend, Will., marriage of</i>, <a href='#Page_190'>190</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c001'>Rawdon, Marmaduke, <a href='#Page_257'>257</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Raynold, <a href='#Page_266'>266</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_269'>269</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Reading, <a href='#Page_85'>85</a>, <a href='#Page_132'>132</a>, <a href='#Page_189'>189</a>, <a href='#Page_203'>203</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_213'>213</a>, <a href='#Page_216'>216</a>, <a href='#Page_249'>249</a> <i>seq.</i></li>
- <li class='c054'>Regrater, <a href='#Page_204'>204</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_207'>207</a>-<a href='#Page_209'>209</a> <i>passim</i>, <a href='#Page_218'>218</a> <i>seq.</i></li>
- <li class='c054'>Religion, <i>independence of married women</i>, <a href='#Page_240'>240</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Restoration Period, <i>women of</i>, <a href='#Page_2'>2</a>, <a href='#Page_9'>9</a>, <a href='#Page_38'>38</a>, <a href='#Page_41'>41</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Retail-Trade'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Retail Trade, <a href='#Page_197'>197</a>-<a href='#Page_209'>209</a> <i>passim</i>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>see</i> <a href='#Chapmen'>Chapmen</a>, <a href='#Badger'>Badger</a>, <a href='#Haberdasher'>Haberdashers</a>, <a href='#Hawkers'>Hawkers</a>, <a href='#Pedlar'>Pedlars</a>, <a href='#noentry'>Regrater</a>, <a href='#Shopkeeper'>Shopkeepers</a>;</li>
- <li><i>women’s position in</i>, <a href='#Page_10'>10</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_150'>150</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_156'>156</a>, <a href='#Page_172'>172</a>, <a href='#Page_197'>197</a>, <a href='#Page_209'>209</a>, <a href='#Page_293'>293</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'>Rous, Margaret, <a href='#Page_17'>17</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Rye'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Rye, <a href='#Page_152'>152</a> <i>seq.</i></li>
- <li class='c001'>Salford, <a href='#Page_52'>52</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a>, <a href='#Page_212'>212</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Salisbury'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Salisbury, <a href='#Page_184'>184</a>, <a href='#Page_213'>213</a>, <a href='#Page_258'>258</a> <i>seq.</i></li>
- <li class='c054'>Salisbury, Earl of, <a href='#Page_25'>25</a>, <a href='#Page_111'>111</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Sandwich'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Sandwich, <a href='#Page_152'>152</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Salt concerns, <a href='#Page_17'>17</a> <i>seq.</i></li>
- <li class='c054'>Scotland, <a href='#Page_126'>126</a>, <a href='#Page_129'>129</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Scottish, <a href='#Page_140'>140</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Semptsress, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a>, <a href='#Page_175'>175</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_202'>202</a>, <a href='#Page_221'>221</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Servants'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Servants, <a href='#Page_5'>5</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_26'>26</a>, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_176'>176</a>, <a href='#Page_187'>187</a>, <a href='#Page_202'>202</a>, <a href='#Page_220'>220</a>, <a href='#Page_241'>241</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>see</i> <a href='#Brewing'>Brewing</a>, <a href='#Journeyman'>Journeyman</a>, <a href='#Wages'>Wages</a>, <a href='#Wages'>Wages assessments</a>;</li>
- <li><i>diet of</i>, <a href='#Page_68'>68</a>, <a href='#Page_88'>88</a>;</li>
- <li><i>dresses</i>, <a href='#Page_126'>126</a>;</li>
- <li><i>employed in domestic drudgery</i>, <a href='#Page_5'>5</a>, <a href='#Page_157'>157</a>, <a href='#Page_196'>196</a>, <a href='#Page_292'>292</a>, <a href='#Page_294'>294</a>;</li>
- <li><i>employed in spinning</i>, <a href='#Page_125'>125</a>;</li>
- <li><i>farm</i>, <a href='#Page_47'>47</a>, <a href='#Page_50'>50</a>, <a href='#Page_116'>116</a>, <a href='#Page_210'>210</a>, <a href='#Page_229'>229</a>;</li>
- <li><i>married</i>, <a href='#Page_81'>81</a>, <a href='#Page_88'>88</a>;</li>
- <li><i>scarcity of</i>, <a href='#Page_56'>56</a>;</li>
- <li><i>housekeepers’ duties</i>, <a href='#Page_255'>255</a>;</li>
- <li><i>medical attendance on</i>, <a href='#Page_252'>252</a>, <a href='#Page_263'>263</a>;</li>
- <li><i>men servants brought up by women</i>, <a href='#Page_141'>141</a>;</li>
- <li><i>of clothiers</i>, <a href='#Page_101'>101</a>;</li>
- <li><i>nursing of</i>, <a href='#Page_251'>251</a> <i>seq.</i>;</li>
- <li><i>shoemaker</i>, <a href='#Page_66'>66</a>, <a href='#Page_203'>203</a>;</li>
- <li><i>training of</i>, <a href='#Page_253'>253</a>;</li>
- <li><i>women, scarcity of</i>, <a href='#Page_157'>157</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'>Sex-jealousy, <i>an anachronism</i>, <a href='#Page_299'>299</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>absence in woollen trade</i>, <a href='#Page_95'>95</a>, <a href='#Page_123'>123</a>;</li>
- <li><i>exclusion of women from trades</i>, <a href='#Page_103'>103</a>, <a href='#Page_105'>105</a>, <a href='#Page_106'>106</a>, <a href='#Page_191'>191</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'>Shakespeare, <a href='#Page_3'>3</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Sharp, Jane, <a href='#Page_269'>269</a>-<a href='#Page_271'>271</a> <i>passim</i>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Shearing, <i>corn</i>, <a href='#Page_49'>49</a>, <a href='#Page_60'>60</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>sheep</i>, <a href='#Page_62'>62</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Sheffield'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Sheffield, <a href='#Page_187'>187</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Shepherd, <a href='#Page_62'>62</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Shipping, <a href='#Page_29'>29</a>-<a href='#Page_31'>31</a> <i>passim</i>.</li>
- <li class='c054'><span class='pageno' id='Page_334'>334</span>Shoemaker, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a>, <a href='#Page_158'>158</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_184'>184</a>, <a href='#Page_202'>202</a> <i>seq.</i>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>see</i> <a href='#Servants'>Servants</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Shopkeeper'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Shopkeeper, <a href='#Page_158'>158</a>, <a href='#Page_168'>168</a>, <a href='#Page_198'>198</a>-<a href='#Page_209'>209</a> <i>passim</i>.</li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Silk'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Silk manufacture, <a href='#Page_94'>94</a>, <a href='#Page_126'>126</a>, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a>-<a href='#Page_143'>143</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>see</i> <a href='#Apprentice'>Apprentice</a>, <a href='#Poor'>Poor</a>, <a href='#Brewing'>Textiles</a>, <a href='#Weaver'>Weaving</a>;</li>
- <li><i>capitalistic</i>, <a href='#Page_142'>142</a>;</li>
- <li><i>occupation of gentlewomen</i>, <a href='#Page_10'>10</a>, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a>-<a href='#Page_140'>140</a> <i>passim</i>, <a href='#Page_142'>142</a>;</li>
- <li><i>refuge of paupers</i>, <a href='#Page_140'>140</a>-<a href='#Page_142'>142</a> <i>passim</i>, <a href='#Page_146'>146</a>;</li>
- <li><i>silk women</i>, <a href='#Page_140'>140</a>;</li>
- <li><i>stockings</i>, <a href='#Page_26'>26</a> <i>seq.</i>;</li>
- <li><i>wages</i>, <a href='#Page_142'>142</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Smith'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Smith, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a>, <a href='#Page_189'>189</a>, <a href='#Page_210'>210</a>, <a href='#Page_259'>259</a>, <a href='#Page_294'>294</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Social position of women, <a href='#Page_8'>8</a>, <a href='#Page_40'>40</a>, <a href='#Page_249'>249</a>, <a href='#Page_283'>283</a>, <a href='#Page_306'>306</a> <i>seq.</i></li>
- <li class='c054'>Southampton, <a href='#Page_101'>101</a>, <a href='#Page_195'>195</a> <i>seq.</i></li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Spinning'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Spinning, <a href='#Page_5'>5</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>see</i> <a href='#Poor'>Poor</a>, <a href='#Linen-manufacture'>Linen-manufacture</a>, <a href='#Woollen'>Woollen</a>;</li>
- <li><i>demand for</i>, <a href='#Page_95'>95</a>, <a href='#Page_110'>110</a>, <a href='#Page_112'>112</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_124'>124</a>, <a href='#Page_129'>129</a>, <a href='#Page_146'>146</a>;</li>
- <li><i>domestic industry</i>, <a href='#Page_9'>9</a>, <a href='#Page_40'>40</a>, <a href='#Page_64'>64</a>, <a href='#Page_96'>96</a>, <a href='#Page_125'>125</a>, <a href='#Page_129'>129</a>, <a href='#Page_137'>137</a>, <a href='#Page_147'>147</a>, <a href='#Page_291'>291</a> <i>seq.</i>;</li>
- <li><i>employment of poor</i>, <a href='#Page_13'>13</a>, <a href='#Page_100'>100</a>, <a href='#Page_110'>110</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a>-<a href='#Page_137'>137</a> <i>passim</i>, <a href='#Page_146'>146</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_209'>209</a>, <a href='#Page_291'>291</a>;</li>
- <li><i>instruction in</i>, <a href='#Page_13'>13</a>, <a href='#Page_111'>111</a>, <a href='#Page_130'>130</a>-<a href='#Page_137'>137</a>;</li>
- <li><i>monopoly of women and children</i>, <a href='#Page_93'>93</a>, <a href='#Page_102'>102</a>, <a href='#Page_145'>145</a>, <a href='#Page_292'>292</a>;</li>
- <li><i>organisation of</i>, <a href='#Page_107'>107</a>-<a href='#Page_113'>113</a>, <a href='#Page_123'>123</a> <i>seq.</i>;</li>
- <li><i>resource for mothers</i>, <a href='#Page_9'>9</a>, <a href='#Page_13'>13</a>, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a>, <a href='#Page_95'>95</a>, <a href='#Page_151'>151</a>, <a href='#Page_209'>209</a>;</li>
- <li><i>wages</i>;</li>
- <li><i>withdraws women from agriculture and service</i>, <a href='#Page_112'>112</a>, <a href='#Page_115'>115</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Spinner'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Spinner, <a href='#Page_18'>18</a>, <a href='#Page_102'>102</a>, <a href='#Page_110'>110</a>, <a href='#Page_113'>113</a>, <a href='#Page_117'>117</a>, <a href='#Page_120'>120</a>, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_141'>141</a>, <a href='#Page_221'>221</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>market spinner</i>, <a href='#Page_107'>107</a>, <a href='#Page_109'>109</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_113'>113</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'>Spinster, <a href='#Page_95'>95</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_107'>107</a>-<a href='#Page_109'>109</a> <i>passim</i>, <a href='#Page_112'>112</a>-<a href='#Page_136'>136</a> <i>passim</i>, <a href='#Page_147'>147</a>, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a>, <a href='#Page_221'>221</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>classes of</i>, <a href='#Page_111'>111</a> <i>seq.</i></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'>Spreading muck, <a href='#Page_62'>62</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='St-Albans'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>St. Albans, <a href='#Page_202'>202</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Stapley, Richard, <a href='#Page_125'>125</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>State, <a href='#Page_242'>242</a>, <a href='#Page_286'>286</a>, <a href='#Page_299'>299</a>, <a href='#Page_303'>303</a>, <a href='#Page_307'>307</a> <i>seq.</i></li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Stationers'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Stationers, <a href='#Page_158'>158</a>, <a href='#Page_161'>161</a>-<a href='#Page_170'>170</a> <i>passim</i>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>see</i> <a href='#Companies'>Companies</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'>Stumpe, <a href='#Page_99'>99</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>see</i> <a href='#Clothiers'>Clothier</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'>Suckle calves, <a href='#Page_47'>47</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Surgeons, <i>see</i> <a href='#Barber-surgeons'>Barber-surgeons</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Surgery, <i>see</i> <a href='#Medicine'>Medicine</a>.</li>
- <li class='c001'><a id='Tailor'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Tailor, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a>, <a href='#Page_181'>181</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Tanner, <a href='#Page_185'>185</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Thatching, <a href='#Page_61'>61</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Taylor, Randall, <a href='#Page_58'>58</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Teaching'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Teaching, <a href='#Page_242'>242</a>, <a href='#Page_265'>265</a>, <a href='#Page_286'>286</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_294'>294</a> <i>seq.</i></li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Textile'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Textile Trades, <a href='#Page_9'>9</a>, <a href='#Page_93'>93</a>-<a href='#Page_149'>149</a> <i>passim</i>, <a href='#Page_150'>150</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>see</i> <a href='#Burling'>Burling</a>, <a href='#Capitalism'>Capitalism</a>, <a href='#Carding'>Carding</a>, <a href='#Clothiers'>Clothiers</a>, <a href='#Cotton'>Cotton</a>, <a href='#Domestic-Industry'>Domestic</a> <a href='#Industry'>Industry</a>, <a href='#noentry'>Family</a> <a href='#Industry'>Industry</a>, <a href='#Fullers'>Fuller</a>, <a href='#Gold'>Gold and Silver</a>, <a href='#noentry'>Knitting</a>, <a href='#Linen'>Linen-manufacture</a>, <a href='#Silk'>Silk</a>, <a href='#Spinning'>Spinning</a>, <a href='#Spinner'>Spinner</a>, <a href='#Weaver'>Weaver</a>, <a href='#Wage-earner'>Wage-earner</a>, <a href='#Wages'>Wages</a>, <a href='#Woollen'>Woollen</a>;</li>
- <li><span class='pageno' id='Page_335'>335</span><i>industrial organisation of</i>, <a href='#Page_96'>96</a>;</li>
- <li><i>proportion of women’s labour</i>, <a href='#Page_93'>93</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_97'>97</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_114'>114</a>, <a href='#Page_133'>133</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_292'>292</a>;</li>
- <li><i>proportion of children’s labour</i>, <a href='#Page_108'>108</a>, <a href='#Page_112'>112</a>, <a href='#Page_114'>114</a>, <a href='#Page_116'>116</a>, <a href='#Page_133'>133</a> <i>seq.</i>;</li>
- <li><i>women’s position in</i>, <a href='#Page_93'>93</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_95'>95</a>, <a href='#Page_146'>146</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'>Thierry, Rachel, <a href='#Page_100'>100</a> <i>seq.</i></li>
- <li class='c054'>Thornton, Mrs. Alice, <a href='#Page_16'>16</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Tiverton'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Tiverton, <a href='#Page_227'>227</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Tobacco pipe makers, <a href='#Page_192'>192</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Torksey'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Torksey, <a href='#Page_222'>222</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Trades'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Trades;
- <ul>
- <li><i>see</i> <a href='#noentry'>Crafts</a>, <a href='#noentry'>Provision</a>, <a href='#Retail-Trade'>Retail Textile</a>;</li>
- <li><i>women’s occupation in</i>, <a href='#Page_10'>10</a>, <a href='#Page_146'>146</a>, <a href='#Page_293'>293</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'>Turbeville, Mrs. Mary, <a href='#Page_258'>258</a> <i>seq.</i></li>
- <li class='c001'><a id='Upholsterer'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Upholsterer, <a href='#Page_184'>184</a>, <a href='#Page_195'>195</a>.</li>
- <li class='c001'>Vantrollier (wife of Thos.), <a href='#Page_163'>163</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Verney, Lady, <a href='#Page_20'>20</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>Sir Edmund</i>, <a href='#Page_15'>15</a>;</li>
- <li><i>Sir Ralph</i>, <a href='#Page_15'>15</a>, <a href='#Page_20'>20</a>, <a href='#Page_258'>258</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Vintners'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Vintners, <a href='#Page_209'>209</a>, <a href='#Page_233'>233</a> <i>seq.</i></li>
- <li class='c054'>Village Community, <a href='#Page_56'>56</a>, <a href='#Page_253'>253</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>disintegration of</i>, <a href='#Page_148'>148</a>;</li>
- <li><i>vigorous stock of</i>, <a href='#Page_42'>42</a>;</li>
- <li><i>women’s influence in</i>, <a href='#Page_148'>148</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'>Vives, <a href='#Page_37'>37</a>.</li>
- <li class='c001'><a id='Wage-earner'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Wage-earner, <a href='#Page_4'>4</a>, <a href='#Page_6'>6</a>, <a href='#Page_64'>64</a>-<a href='#Page_92'>92</a> <i>passim</i>, <a href='#Page_99'>99</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>see</i> <a href='#Agriculture'>Agriculture</a>, <a href='#noentry'>Birth-rate</a>, <a href='#Butcher'>Butcher</a>, <a href='#Capitalism'>Capitalism</a>, <a href='#Children'>Children</a>, <a href='#Infant-Mortality'>Infant</a> <a href='#noentry'>Mortality</a>, <a href='#Journeyman'>Journeyman</a>, <a href='#Marriage'>Marriage</a>, <a href='#Motherhood'>Motherhood</a>, <a href='#Spinning'>Spinning</a>, <a href='#Silk'>Silk</a>, <a href='#Textile'>Textile-Manufactures</a>, <a href='#Wages'>Wages</a>, <a href='#Widow'>Widow</a>, <a href='#Wife'>Wife</a>, <a href='#Woollen'>Woollen</a>;</li>
- <li><i>definition of</i>, <a href='#Page_43'>43</a>, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a>;</li>
- <li><i>children of</i>, <a href='#Page_86'>86</a> <i>seq.</i>;</li>
- <li><i>class of undesirables</i>, <a href='#Page_90'>90</a>;</li>
- <li><i>combination among</i>, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a>-<a href='#Page_124'>124</a> <i>passim</i>, <a href='#Page_298'>298</a>, <a href='#Page_301'>301</a>;</li>
- <li><i>family income</i>, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a>-<a href='#Page_69'>69</a> <i>passim</i>, <a href='#Page_71'>71</a>, <a href='#Page_79'>79</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_178'>178</a>;</li>
- <li><i>insolvency</i>, <a href='#Page_80'>80</a>-<a href='#Page_92'>92</a> <i>passim</i>, <a href='#Page_129'>129</a>, <a href='#Page_146'>146</a>-<a href='#Page_149'>149</a>, <a href='#Page_209'>209</a>, <a href='#Page_293'>293</a>;</li>
- <li><i>numbers of</i>, <a href='#Page_4'>4</a>, <a href='#Page_90'>90</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_305'>305</a>;</li>
- <li><i>wife of</i>, <a href='#Page_9'>9</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_76'>76</a>-<a href='#Page_89'>89</a> <i>passim</i>, <a href='#Page_235'>235</a>;</li>
- <li><i>her earning capacity</i>, <a href='#Page_68'>68</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_89'>89</a>, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a>, <a href='#Page_147'>147</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_209'>209</a>, <a href='#Page_292'>292</a>;</li>
- <li><i>her virtual exclusion from skilled trades</i>, <a href='#Page_298'>298</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Wages'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Wages, <a href='#Page_35'>35</a>, <a href='#Page_59'>59</a>, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a>, <a href='#Page_100'>100</a>, <a href='#Page_301'>301</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>see</i> <a href='#Brewing'>Brewing</a>, <a href='#Carpenter'>Carpenters</a>, <a href='#Doctor'>Doctors</a>, <a href='#Husbandman'>Husbandmen</a>, <a href='#Linen'>Linen-manufacture</a>, <a href='#Nurse'>Nurse (sick)</a>, <a href='#Midwife'>Midwife</a>, <a href='#Miller'>Miller</a>, <a href='#Poor'>Poor</a>, <a href='#Spinning'>Spinning</a>, <a href='#Silk'>Silk</a>, <a href='#Woollen'>Woollen</a>;</li>
- <li><i>assessments</i>, <a href='#Page_50'>50</a>, <a href='#Page_59'>59</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_62'>62</a>, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a>-<a href='#Page_67'>67</a> <i>passim</i>, <a href='#Page_72'>72</a>, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a>, <a href='#Page_90'>90</a>, <a href='#Page_210'>210</a>, <a href='#Page_293'>293</a>;</li>
- <li><i>difference between family and individual wages</i>, <a href='#Page_7'>7</a>, <a href='#Page_296'>296</a>, <a href='#Page_299'>299</a>;</li>
- <li><i>day labourers, men</i>, <a href='#Page_9'>9</a>, <a href='#Page_56'>56</a>, <a href='#Page_60'>60</a>-<a href='#Page_62'>62</a> <i>passim</i>, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_96'>96</a>;</li>
- <li><i>day labourers, women</i>, <a href='#Page_9'>9</a>, <a href='#Page_60'>60</a>-<a href='#Page_66'>66</a> <i>passim</i>, <a href='#Page_68'>68</a>, <a href='#Page_72'>72</a>, <a href='#Page_89'>89</a>;</li>
- <li><i>servants, men</i>, <a href='#Page_50'>50</a>, <a href='#Page_56'>56</a>, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a> <i>seq.</i>;</li>
- <li><span class='pageno' id='Page_336'>336</span><i>servants, women</i>, <a href='#Page_50'>50</a>, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a>, <a href='#Page_157'>157</a>;</li>
- <li><i>married men</i>, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a> <i>seq.</i>;</li>
- <li><i>not expected to keep family</i>, <a href='#Page_12'>12</a>, <a href='#Page_86'>86</a>, <a href='#Page_90'>90</a>, <a href='#Page_293'>293</a>;</li>
- <li><i>relation to cost of living</i>, <a href='#Page_10'>10</a>, <a href='#Page_68'>68</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_79'>79</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a>, <a href='#Page_89'>89</a>, <a href='#Page_95'>95</a>, <a href='#Page_130'>130</a>, <a href='#Page_134'>134</a>-<a href='#Page_137'>137</a> <i>passim</i>, <a href='#Page_145'>145</a>, <a href='#Page_178'>178</a>;</li>
- <li><i>women’s, do not represent value of their work</i>, <a href='#Page_64'>64</a>, <a href='#Page_137'>137</a>, <a href='#Page_145'>145</a>, <a href='#Page_291'>291</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_304'>304</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Weaver'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Weaver, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a>, <a href='#Page_259'>259</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>see</i> <a href='#Apprentice'>Apprentice</a>;</li>
- <li><i>assault women</i>, <a href='#Page_126'>126</a>;</li>
- <li><i>complaints against clothiers</i>, <a href='#Page_114'>114</a>, <a href='#Page_117'>117</a>-<a href='#Page_123'>123</a> <i>passim</i>,</li>
- <li><i>domestic purposes</i>, <a href='#Page_40'>40</a>, <a href='#Page_64'>64</a>, <a href='#Page_125'>125</a>;</li>
- <li><i>linen</i>, <a href='#Page_18'>18</a>, <a href='#Page_124'>124</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a>, <a href='#Page_136'>136</a>;</li>
- <li><i>women</i>, <a href='#Page_129'>129</a>;</li>
- <li><i>woollen</i>, <a href='#Page_18'>18</a>, <a href='#Page_99'>99</a>, <a href='#Page_111'>111</a>, <a href='#Page_116'>116</a>;</li>
- <li><i>women</i>, <a href='#Page_102'>102</a>-<a href='#Page_106'>106</a>, <a href='#Page_145'>145</a>;</li>
- <li><i>forbidden to weave cloth</i>, <a href='#Page_103'>103</a>;</li>
- <li><i>widow</i>, <a href='#Page_103'>103</a> <i>seq.</i>;</li>
- <li><i>ribbons and tape</i>; <a href='#Page_104'>104</a>;</li>
- <li><i>silk</i>, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a>, <a href='#Page_141'>141</a>;</li>
- <li><i>Wages</i>, <a href='#Page_120'>120</a>, <a href='#Page_149'>149</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'><i>Webber</i>, <a href='#Page_102'>102</a>, <a href='#Page_221'>221</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>see</i> <a href='#Weaver'>Weaver</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'>Webster, <a href='#Page_102'>102</a>, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a>, <a href='#Page_221'>221</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>see</i> <a href='#Weaver'>Weaver</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'>Weeding, <a href='#Page_62'>62</a>, <a href='#Page_89'>89</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Wet-nurse, <a href='#Page_26'>26</a>, <a href='#Page_58'>58</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Whipping dogs out of Church, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Whit-awers'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Whit-awers, <a href='#Page_191'>191</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Winchcombe, John, <a href='#Page_99'>99</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'>Winnowing, <a href='#Page_49'>49</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Widow'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Widow, <a href='#Page_29'>29</a>, <a href='#Page_33'>33</a>, <a href='#Page_45'>45</a>, <a href='#Page_86'>86</a>, <a href='#Page_100'>100</a>, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a>, <a href='#Page_129'>129</a>, <a href='#Page_137'>137</a>, <a href='#Page_156'>156</a>, <a href='#Page_171'>171</a>, <a href='#Page_177'>177</a>, <a href='#Page_189'>189</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_195'>195</a>, <a href='#Page_200'>200</a>, <a href='#Page_201'>201</a>, <a href='#Page_204'>204</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_209'>209</a>, <a href='#Page_213'>213</a>, <a href='#Page_216'>216</a>, <a href='#Page_218'>218</a>, <a href='#Page_227'>227</a>, <a href='#Page_230'>230</a>, <a href='#Page_249'>249</a>-<a href='#Page_252'>252</a> <i>passim</i>, <a href='#Page_264'>264</a>, <a href='#Page_268'>268</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>see</i> <a href='#Apprentice'>Apprentice</a>, <a href='#Housing'>Housing</a>, <a href='#noentry'>Journeymen</a>, <a href='#Poor'>Poor Relief</a>, <a href='#Weaver'>Weaver</a>;</li>
- <li><i>dependence on journeymen</i>, <a href='#Page_185'>185</a>, <a href='#Page_189'>189</a>, <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_261'>261</a>;</li>
- <li><i>membership in late husband’s gild</i>, <a href='#Page_160'>160</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_168'>168</a>, <a href='#Page_174'>174</a>, <a href='#Page_176'>176</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_179'>179</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_183'>183</a>, <a href='#Page_185'>185</a>, <a href='#Page_187'>187</a>, <a href='#Page_233'>233</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_261'>261</a>, <a href='#Page_298'>298</a>;</li>
- <li><i>pensions</i> to, <a href='#Page_69'>69</a>, <i>seq.</i> <a href='#Page_170'>170</a>;</li>
- <li><i>of soldiers</i>, <a href='#Page_248'>248</a> <i>seq.</i>;</li>
- <li><i>succession to late husband’s business</i>, <a href='#Page_11'>11</a>, <a href='#Page_30'>30</a>-<a href='#Page_34'>34</a> <i>passim</i>, <a href='#Page_104'>104</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_151'>151</a>, <a href='#Page_154'>154</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_160'>160</a>-<a href='#Page_163'>163</a> <i>passim</i>, <a href='#Page_167'>167</a>-<a href='#Page_173'>173</a> <i>passim</i>, <a href='#Page_188'>188</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_215'>215</a>, <a href='#Page_217'>217</a>, <a href='#Page_221'>221</a>, <a href='#Page_293'>293</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Wife'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Wife, <a href='#Page_45'>45</a>, <a href='#Page_70'>70</a>, <a href='#Page_216'>216</a>, <a href='#Page_237'>237</a>, <a href='#Page_280'>280</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>see</i> <a href='#Alehouse'>Alehouse</a>, <a href='#Bakers'>Bakers</a>, <a href='#Business'>Business</a>, <a href='#Capitalists'>Capitalist</a>, <a href='#Dairy'>Dairy</a>, <a href='#Doctor'>Doctor</a>, <a href='#Domestic-Industry'>Domestic</a>, <a href='#Farmer'>Farmer</a>, <a href='#Household'>Household Management</a>, <a href='#Husbandman'>Husbandman</a>, <a href='#Journeyman'>Journeyman</a>, <a href='#Mother'>Mother</a>, <a href='#Pig-keeping'>Pig-keeping</a>, <a href='#Poultry-keeping'>Poultry-keeping</a>, <a href='#Shopkeeper'>Shop-keeper</a>, <a href='#Nursing'>Sick nursing</a>, <a href='#Spinning'>Spinning</a>, <a href='#Wage-earner'>Wage-earner</a>;</li>
- <li><span class='pageno' id='Page_337'>337</span><i>economic position of</i>, <a href='#Page_11'>11</a>, <a href='#Page_292'>292</a>;</li>
- <li><i>membership in husband’s gild</i>, <a href='#Page_150'>150</a>, <a href='#Page_160'>160</a>, <a href='#Page_171'>171</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_179'>179</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_191'>191</a>, <a href='#Page_261'>261</a>, <a href='#Page_301'>301</a>;</li>
- <li><i>mutual dependence of husband and wife</i>, <a href='#Page_12'>12</a>, <a href='#Page_41'>41</a>, <a href='#Page_44'>44</a>, <a href='#Page_49'>49</a>, <a href='#Page_54'>54</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_300'>300</a>-<a href='#Page_302'>302</a> <i>passim</i>;</li>
- <li><i>pauperisation of wife</i>, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a>, <a href='#Page_147'>147</a>, <a href='#Page_149'>149</a>;</li>
- <li><i>wife provides food and clothes for family</i>, <a href='#Page_12'>12</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_39'>39</a>, <a href='#Page_60'>60</a>, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a>, <a href='#Page_90'>90</a>, <a href='#Page_94'>94</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_106'>106</a>, <a href='#Page_112'>112</a>, <a href='#Page_125'>125</a>, <a href='#Page_137'>137</a>, <a href='#Page_145'>145</a>, <a href='#Page_291'>291</a>, <a href='#Page_293'>293</a>, <a href='#Page_304'>304</a>;</li>
- <li><i>separate business</i>, <a href='#Page_17'>17</a>, <a href='#Page_40'>40</a>, <a href='#Page_151'>151</a>-<a href='#Page_156'>156</a> <i>passim</i>, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a>, <a href='#Page_175'>175</a>-<a href='#Page_178'>178</a> <i>passim</i>, <a href='#Page_194'>194</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_202'>202</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_206'>206</a>, <a href='#Page_208'>208</a>, <a href='#Page_214'>214</a>, <a href='#Page_219'>219</a>, <a href='#Page_221'>221</a>, <a href='#Page_228'>228</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_231'>231</a>;</li>
- <li><i>settlement</i>, <a href='#Page_80'>80</a>-<a href='#Page_89'>89</a> <i>passim</i>;</li>
- <li><i>soldier’s wife</i>, <a href='#Page_142'>142</a>;</li>
- <li><i>subjection to husband</i>, <a href='#Page_16'>16</a>, <a href='#Page_35'>35</a>, <a href='#Page_41'>41</a>, <a href='#Page_45'>45</a>, <a href='#Page_197'>197</a>, <a href='#Page_240'>240</a>, <a href='#Page_302'>302</a>-<a href='#Page_304'>304</a> <i>passim</i>;</li>
- <li><i>working in husband’s business</i>, <a href='#Page_29'>29</a>, <a href='#Page_34'>34</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_40'>40</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_45'>45</a>, <a href='#Page_95'>95</a>, <a href='#Page_100'>100</a>-<a href='#Page_102'>102</a> <i>passim</i>, <a href='#Page_144'>144</a>, <a href='#Page_151'>151</a>, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a>-<a href='#Page_159'>159</a> <i>passim</i>, <a href='#Page_163'>163</a>, <a href='#Page_172'>172</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_175'>175</a>, <a href='#Page_184'>184</a>-<a href='#Page_187'>187</a> <i>passim</i>, <a href='#Page_192'>192</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_196'>196</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_202'>202</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_212'>212</a>, <a href='#Page_215'>215</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_220'>220</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_229'>229</a>, <a href='#Page_234'>234</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_293'>293</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_302'>302</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Woollen'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Woollen manufacture, <a href='#Page_42'>42</a>, <a href='#Page_94'>94</a>, <a href='#Page_97'>97</a>-<a href='#Page_124'>124</a> <i>passim</i>, <a href='#Page_126'>126</a>, <a href='#Page_129'>129</a>, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><i>see</i> <a href='#Clothiers'>Clothiers</a>, <a href='#Drapers'>Drapers</a>, <a href='#Poor'>Poor</a>, <a href='#Spinning'>Spinning</a>, <a href='#Weaver'>Weaver</a>;</li>
- <li><i>capitalistic</i>, <a href='#Page_94'>94</a>, <a href='#Page_96'>96</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_123'>123</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_147'>147</a>;</li>
- <li><i>domestic</i>, <a href='#Page_49'>49</a>, <a href='#Page_106'>106</a>;</li>
- <li><i>family</i>, <a href='#Page_97'>97</a>, <a href='#Page_106'>106</a>;</li>
- <li><i>dependence on women’s and children’s labour</i>, <a href='#Page_97'>97</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_112'>112</a>, <a href='#Page_114'>114</a>;</li>
- <li><i>fluctuations in trade</i>, <a href='#Page_98'>98</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_110'>110</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_118'>118</a>-<a href='#Page_122'>122</a> <i>passim</i>, <a href='#Page_147'>147</a> <i>seq.</i>;</li>
- <li><i>instruction in</i>, <a href='#Page_110'>110</a> <i>seq.</i>;</li>
- <li><i>men and women wage-earners unite in trade disputes</i>, <a href='#Page_116'>116</a>-<a href='#Page_123'>123</a> <i>passim</i>;</li>
- <li><i>political power</i>, <a href='#Page_126'>126</a>;</li>
- <li><i>wages for spinning</i>, <a href='#Page_49'>49</a>, <a href='#Page_95'>95</a>-<a href='#Page_97'>97</a> <i>passim</i>, <a href='#Page_100'>100</a>, <a href='#Page_108'>108</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_113'>113</a>-<a href='#Page_118'>118</a> <i>passim</i>, <a href='#Page_120'>120</a>, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_124'>124</a>, <a href='#Page_134'>134</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_137'>137</a>;</li>
- <li><i>women’s position in</i>, <a href='#Page_98'>98</a>, <a href='#Page_102'>102</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_106'>106</a>, <a href='#Page_124'>124</a>;</li>
- <li><i>wool-combers</i>, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c054'>Wycherley, <a href='#Page_3'>3</a>, <a href='#Page_37'>37</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='Yeoman'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>Yeoman, <a href='#Page_9'>9</a>, <a href='#Page_50'>50</a>, <a href='#Page_76'>76</a>, <a href='#Page_90'>90</a>.</li>
- <li class='c054'><a id='York'></a></li>
- <li class='c054'>York, <a href='#Page_212'>212</a>.</li>
-</ul>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c006'>
- <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_338'>338</span><span class='c055'>LIST OF STUDIES IN ECONOMICS AND POLITICAL SCIENCE.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c056' />
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><i>A Series of Monographs by Lecturers and Students connected with the</i></div>
- <div><i>London School of Economics and Political Science.</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c056' />
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>EDITED BY THE</div>
- <div class='c000'><span class='c008'>DIRECTOR OF THE LONDON SCHOOL OF ECONOMICS AND POLITICAL SCIENCE.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c056' />
-<p class='c029'><b>1. The History of Local Rates in England.</b> The substance
-of five lectures given at the School in November and December, 1895.
-By <span class='sc'>Edwin Cannan</span>, M.A., LL.D. 1896; second, enlarged edition,
-1912; xv. and 215 pp., Crown 8vo, cloth. 4<i>s.</i> net. <i>P. S. King &amp; Son.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c013'><b>2. Select Documents Illustrating the History of Trade Unionism.</b>
-1.—<span class='sc'>The Tailoring Trade.</span> By <span class='sc'>F. W. Galton</span>. With
-a Preface by <span class='sc'>Sidney Webb</span>, LL.B. 1896; 242 pp., Crown 8vo,
-cloth. 5<i>s.</i> <i>P. S. King &amp; Son.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c013'><b>3. German Social Democracy.</b> Six lectures delivered at the
-School in February and March, 1896. By the Hon. <span class='sc'>Bertrand
-Russell</span>, B.A., late Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge. With an
-Appendix on Social Democracy and the Woman Question in Germany.
-By <span class='sc'>Alys Russell</span>, B.A. 1896; 204 pp., Crown 8vo, cloth. 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>
-<i>P. S. King &amp; Son.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c013'><b>4. The Referendum in Switzerland.</b> By <span class='sc'>M. Simon Deploige</span>,
-University of Louvain. With a Letter on the Referendum in Belgium
-by <span class='sc'>M. J. van den Huevel</span>, Professor of International Law in the
-University of Louvain. Translated by <span class='sc'>C. P. Trevelyan</span>, M.A.,
-Trinity College, Cambridge, and edited with Notes, Introduction,
-Bibliography, and Appendices, by <span class='sc'>Lilian Tomn</span> (Mrs. Knowles), of
-Girton College, Cambridge, Research Student at the School. 1898;
-x. and 334 pp., Crown 8vo, cloth. 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> <i>P. S. King &amp; Son.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c013'><b>5. The Economic Policy of Colbert.</b> By <span class='sc'>A. J. Sargent</span>, M.A.,
-Senior Hulme Exhibitioner, Brasenose College, Oxford, and Whately
-Prizeman, 1897, Trinity College, Dublin. 1899; viii. and 138 pp.,
-Crown 8vo, cloth. 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> <i>P. S. King &amp; Son.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_339'>339</span><b>6. Local Variation in Wages.</b> (The Adam Smith Prize,
-Cambridge University, 1898). By <span class='sc'>F. W. Lawrence</span>, M.A., Fellow
-of Trinity College, Cambridge. 1899; viii. and 90 pp., with Index
-and 18 Maps and Diagrams. 4to, 11 in. by 8¼ in., cloth. 8<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>
-<i>Longmans, Green &amp; Co.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c013'><b>7. The Receipt Roll of the Exchequer for Michaelmas Term
-of the Thirty-first Year of Henry II. (1185).</b> A unique fragment
-transcribed and edited by the Class in Palæography and Diplomatic,
-under the supervision of the Lecturer, <span class='sc'>Hubert Hall</span>, F.S.A., of H.M.
-Public Record Office. With thirty-one Facsimile Plates in Collotype
-and Parallel readings from the contemporary Pipe Roll. 1899; vii.
-and 37 pp., Folio, 15¼ in. by 11¼ in., in green cloth; 2 Copies left.
-Apply to the Director of the London School of Economics.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'><b>8. Elements of Statistics.</b> By <span class='sc'>Arthur L. Bowley</span>, M.A.,
-Sc.D., F.S.S., Cobden and Adam Smith Prizeman, Cambridge; Guy
-Silver Medallist of the Royal Statistical Society; Newmarch Lecturer,
-1897-98. 500 pp. and 40 Diagrams, Demy 8vo, cloth. 1901; Third
-edition, 1907; viii. and 336 pp. 12<i>s.</i> net. <i>P. S. King &amp; Son.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c013'><b>9. The Place of Compensation in Temperance Reform.</b> By
-<span class='sc'>C. P. Sanger</span>, M.A., late Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge,
-Barrister-at-Law. 1901; viii. and 136 pp., Crown 8vo, cloth.
-2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> net. <i>P. S. King &amp; Son.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c013'><b>10. A History of Factory Legislation.</b> By <span class='sc'>B. L. Hutchins</span>
-and <span class='sc'>A. Harrison</span> (Mrs. Spencer), B.A., D.Sc. (Econ.), London. With
-a Preface by <span class='sc'>Sidney Webb</span>, LL.B. 1903; new and revised edition,
-1911; xvi. and 298 pp., Demy 8vo, cloth. 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> net.
-<i>P. S. King &amp; Son.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c013'><b>11.The Pipe Roll of the Exchequer of the See of Winchester
-for the Fourth Year of the Episcopate of Peter Des Roches (1207).</b>
-Transcribed and edited from the original Roll in the possession of the
-Ecclesiastical Commissioners by the Class in Palæography and Diplomatic,
-under the supervision of the Lecturer, <span class='sc'>Hubert Hall</span>, F.S.A.,
-of H.M. Public Record Office. With a Frontispiece giving a Facsimile
-of the Roll. 1903; xlviii. and 100 pp., Folio, 13½ in. by 8½ in., green
-cloth. 15<i>s.</i> net. <i>P. S. King &amp; Son.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c013'><b>12. Self-Government in Canada and How it was Achieved:
-The Story of Lord Durham’s Report.</b> By <span class='sc'>F. Bradshaw</span>, B.A.,
-D.Sc. (Econ.), London; Senior Hulme Exhibitioner, Brasenose
-College, Oxford. 1903; 414 pp., Demy 8vo, cloth. 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> net.
-<i>P. S. King &amp; Son.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c013'><b>13. History of the Commercial and Financial Relations
-Between England and Ireland from the Period of the Restoration.</b>
-By <span class='sc'>Alice Effie Murray</span> (Mrs. Radice), D.Sc. (Econ.), London,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_340'>340</span>former Student at Girton College, Cambridge; Research Student of
-the London School of Economics and Political Science. 1903; 486 pp.
-Demy 8vo, cloth. 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> net. <i>P. S. King &amp; Son.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c013'><b>14. The English Peasantry and the Enclosure of Common
-Fields.</b> By <span class='sc'>Gilbert Slater</span>, M.A., St. John’s College, Cambridge;
-D.Sc. (Econ.), London. 1906; 337 pp., Demy 8vo, cloth. 10<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>
-net. <i>Constable &amp; Co.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c013'><b>15. A History of the English Agricultural Labourer.</b> By
-Dr. <span class='sc'>W. Hasbach</span>, Professor of Economics in the University of Kiel.
-Translated from the Second Edition (1908), by <span class='sc'>Ruth Kenyon</span>.
-Introduction by <span class='sc'>Sidney Webb</span>, LL.B. 1908; xvi. and 470 pp.,
-Demy 8vo, cloth. 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> net. <i>P. S. King &amp; Son.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c013'><b>16. A Colonial Autocracy: New South Wales under Governor
-Macquarie, 1810-1821.</b> By <span class='sc'>Marion Phillips</span>, B.A., Melbourne;
-D.Sc. (Econ.), London. 1909; xxiii. and 336 pp., Demy 8vo,
-cloth. 10<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> <i>P. S. King &amp; Son.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c013'><b>17. India and the Tariff Problem.</b> By <span class='sc'>H. B. Lees Smith</span>,
-M.A., M.P. 1909; 120 pp., Crown 8vo, cloth. 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> net.
-<i>Constable &amp; Co.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c013'><b>18. Practical Notes on the Management of Elections.</b>
-Three Lectures delivered at the School in November, 1909, by
-<span class='sc'>Ellis T. Powell</span>, LL.B., D.Sc. (Econ.), London, Fellow of the
-Royal Historical and Royal Economic Societies, of the Inner Temple,
-Barrister-at-Law, 1909; 52 pp., 8vo, paper. 1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> net.
-<i>P. S. King &amp; Son.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c013'><b>19. The Political Development of Japan.</b> By <span class='sc'>G. E. Uyehara</span>,
-B.A., Washington, D.Sc. (Econ.), London. xxiv. and 296 pp., Demy
-8vo, cloth. 1910. 8<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> net. <i>Constable &amp; Co.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c013'><b>20. National and Local Finance.</b> By <span class='sc'>J. Watson Grice</span>,
-D.Sc. (Econ.), London. Preface by <span class='sc'>Sidney Webb</span>, LL.B. 1910;
-428 pp., Demy 8vo, cloth. 12<i>s.</i> net. <i>P. S. King &amp; Son.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c013'><b>21. An Example of Communal Currency.</b> Facts about the
-Guernsey Market-house. By <span class='sc'>J. Theodore Harris</span>, B.A., with an
-Introduction by <span class='sc'>Sidney Webb</span>, LL.B. 1911; xiv. and 62 pp.,
-Crown 8vo, cloth. 1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> net; paper, 1<i>s.</i> net. <i>P. S. King &amp; Son.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c013'><b>22. Municipal Origins.</b> History of Private Bill Legislation. By
-<span class='sc'>F. H. Spencer</span>, LL.B., D.Sc. (Econ.), London; with a Preface by
-Sir <span class='sc'>Edward Clarke</span>, K.C. 1911; xi. and 333. pp., Demy 8vo, cloth.
-10<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> net. <i>Constable &amp; Co.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c013'><b>23. Seasonal Trades.</b> By <span class='sc'>Various Authors</span>. With an Introduction
-by <span class='sc'>Sidney Webb</span>. Edited by <span class='sc'>Sidney Webb</span>, LL.B., and
-<span class='sc'>Arnold Freeman</span>, M.A. 1912; xi. and 410 pp., Demy 8vo, cloth.
-10. 6<i>d.</i> net. <i>Constable &amp; Co.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_341'>341</span>24. <b>Grants in Aid.</b> A Criticism and a Proposal. By <span class='sc'>Sidney
-Webb</span>, LL.B. 1911; vii. and 135 pp., Demy 8vo, cloth. 5<i>s.</i> net.
-<i>Longmans, Green &amp; Co.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c013'>25. <b>The Panama Canal: A Study in International Law.</b>
-By <span class='sc'>H. Arias</span>, B.A., LL.D. 1911; xiv. and 188 pp., 2 maps, bibliography,
-Demy 8vo, cloth. 10<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> net. <i>P. S. King &amp; Son.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c013'>26. <b>Combination Among Railway Companies.</b> By <span class='sc'>W. A.
-Robertson</span>, B.A. 1912; 105 pp., Demy 8vo, cloth. 1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> net;
-paper, 1<i>s.</i> net. <i>Constable &amp; Co.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c013'>27. <b>War and the Private Citizen</b>: Studies in International
-Law. By <span class='sc'>A. Pearce Higgins</span>, M.A., LL.D.; with Introductory
-Note by the Rt. Hon. Arthur Cohen, K.C. 1912; xvi. and 200 pp.,
-Demy 8vo, cloth. 5<i>s.</i> net. <i>P. S. King &amp; Son.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c013'>28. <b>Life in an English Village</b>: an Economical and Historical
-Survey of the Parish of Corsley, in Wiltshire. By <span class='sc'>M. F. Davies</span>
-1909; xiii. and 319 pp., illustrations, bibliography, Demy 8vo, cloth.
-10<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> net. <i>T. Fisher Unwin.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c013'>29. <b>English Apprenticeship and Child Labour</b>: a History.
-By <span class='sc'>O. Jocelyn Dunlop</span>, D.Sc. (Econ.), London; with a Supplementary
-Section on the Modern Problem of Juvenile Labour, by the
-Author and <span class='sc'>R. D. Denman</span>, M.P. 1912; pp. 390, bibliography,
-Demy 8vo, cloth. 10<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> net. <i>T. Fisher Unwin.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c013'>30. <b>Origin of Property and the Formation of the Village
-Community.</b> By <i>J. St. Lewinski</i>, D.Ec.Sc., Brussels. 1913; xi.
-and 71 pp., Demy 8vo, cloth. 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> net. <i>Constable &amp; Co.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c013'>31. <b>The Tendency Towards Industrial Combination (in some
-Spheres of British Industry).</b> By <span class='sc'>G. R. Carter</span>, M.A. 1913;
-xxiii. and 391 pp., Demy 8vo, cloth. 6<i>s.</i> net. <i>Constable &amp; Co.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c013'>32. <b>Tariffs at Work</b>: an outline of Practical Tariff Administration.
-By <span class='sc'>John Hedley Higginson</span>, B.Sc. (Econ.), London,
-Mitchell Student of the University of London; Cobden Prizeman and
-Silver Medallist. 1913; 150 pp., Crown 8vo, cloth. 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> net.
-<i>P. S. King &amp; Son.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c013'>33. <b>English Taxation, 1640-1799.</b> An Essay on Policy and
-Opinion. By <span class='sc'>William Kennedy</span>, M.A., D.Sc. (Econ.), London;
-Shaw Research Student of the London School of Economics and
-Political Science. 1913; 200 pp., Demy 8vo. 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> net.
-<i>G. Bell &amp; Sons.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c013'>34. <b>Emigration from the United Kingdom to North America,
-1763-1912.</b> By <span class='sc'>Stanley C. Johnson</span>, M.A., Cambridge, D.Sc.
-(Econ.), London. 1913; xvi. and 387 pp., Demy 8vo, cloth. 6<i>s.</i> net.
-<i>G. Routledge &amp; Sons.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_342'>342</span><b>35. The Financing of the Hundred Years’ War, 1337-1360.</b>
-By <span class='sc'>Schuyler B. Terry</span>. 1913; xvi. and 199 pp., Demy 8vo, cloth.
-6<i>s.</i> net. <i>Constable &amp; Co.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c013'><b>36. Kinship and Social Organisation.</b> By <span class='sc'>W. H. R. Rivers</span>,
-M.D., F.R.S., Fellow of St. John’s College, Cambridge. 1914; 96 pp.
-Demy 8vo, cloth. 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> net. <i>Constable &amp; Co.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c013'><b>37. The Nature and First Principle of Taxation.</b> By <span class='sc'>Robert
-Jones</span>, D.Sc. (Econ.), London; with a Preface by <span class='sc'>Sidney Webb</span>, LL.B.,
-1914; xvii. and 299 pp., Demy 8vo, cloth. 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> net.
-<i>P. S. King &amp; Son.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c013'><b>38. The Export of Capital.</b> By <span class='sc'>C. K. Hobson</span>, M.A., D.Sc.
-(Econ.), London, F.S.S., Shaw Research Student of the London School
-of Economics and Political Science. 1914; xxv. and 264 pp., Demy
-8vo, cloth. 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> net. <i>Constable &amp; Co.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c013'><b>39. Industrial Training.</b> By <span class='sc'>Norman Burrell Dearle</span>, M.A.,
-D.Sc. (Econ.), London, Fellow of All Souls College, Oxford; Shaw
-Research Student of the London School of Economics and Political
-Science. 1914; 610 pp., Demy 8vo, cloth. 10<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> net.
-<i>P. S. King &amp; Son.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c013'><b>40. Theory of Rates and Fares.</b> From the French of Charles
-Colson’s “Transports et tarifs” (3rd edn., 1907), by <span class='sc'>L. R.
-Christie</span>, <span class='sc'>G. Leedham</span>, and <span class='sc'>C. Travis</span>. Edited and
-arranged by <span class='sc'>Charles Travis</span>, with an Introduction by <span class='sc'>W. M.
-Acworth</span>, M.A. 1914; viii. and 195 pp., Demy 8vo, cloth. 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>
-net. <i>G. Bell &amp; Sons, Ltd.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c013'><b>41. Advertising: a Study of a Modern Business Power.</b> By
-<span class='sc'>G. W. Goodall</span>, B.Sc. (Econ.), London; with an Introduction by
-<span class='sc'>Sidney Webb</span>, LL.B. 1914; xviii. and 91 pp., Demy 8vo, cloth.
-2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> net; paper, 1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> net. <i>Constable &amp; Co.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c013'><b>42. English Railways: their Development and their Relation
-to the State.</b> By <span class='sc'>Edward Carnegie Cleveland-Stevens</span>, M.A.,
-Christ Church, Oxford; D.Sc. (Econ.), London; Shaw Research
-Student of the London School of Economics and Political Science.
-1915; xvi. and 325 pp., Demy 8vo, cloth. 6<i>s.</i> net.
-<i>G. Routledge &amp; Sons.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c013'><b>43. The Lands of the Scottish Kings in England.</b> By
-<span class='sc'>Margaret F. Moore</span>, M.A., with an Introduction by <span class='sc'>P. Hume
-Brown</span>, M.A., LL.D., D.D., Professor of Ancient Scottish History
-and Palæography, University of Edinburgh. 1915; xi. and 141 pp.,
-Demy 8vo, cloth, 5<i>s.</i> net. <i>George Allen &amp; Unwin.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c013'><b>44. The Colonisation of Australia, 1829-1842: the Wakefield
-Experiment in Empire Building.</b> By <span class='sc'>Richard C. Mills</span>,
-LL.M., Melbourne; D.Sc. (Econ.), London; with an Introduction
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_343'>343</span>by <span class='sc'>Graham Wallas</span>, M.A., Professor of Political Science in the
-University of London. 1915; xx., 363 pp., Demy 8vo, cloth. 10<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>
-net. <i>Sidgwick &amp; Jackson.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c013'><b>45. The Philosophy of Nietzsche.</b> By <span class='sc'>A. Wolf</span>, M.A., D.Lit.,
-Fellow of University College, London; Reader in Logic and Ethics
-in the University of London. 1915; 114 pp., Demy 8vo, cloth,
-3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> net. <i>Constable &amp; Co.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c013'><b>46. English Public Health Administration.</b> By <span class='sc'>B. G.
-Bannington</span>; with a Preface by <span class='sc'>Graham Wallas</span>, M.A., Professor
-of Political Science in the University of London. 1915; xiv., 338 pp.,
-Demy 8vo, cloth. 8<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> net. <i>P. S. King &amp; Son.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c013'><b>47. British Incomes and Property: the application of
-Official Statistics to Economic Problems.</b> By <span class='sc'>J. C. Stamp</span>,
-D.Sc. (Econ.), London. 1916.; xvi. 538 pp., Demy 8vo, cloth.
-12<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> net. <i>P. S. King &amp; Son.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c013'><b>48. Village Government in British India.</b> By <span class='sc'>John
-Matthai</span>, D.Sc. (Econ.), London; with a Preface by <span class='sc'>Sidney Webb</span>,
-L.L.B., Professor of Public Administration in the University of London.
-1915; xix., 211 pp., Demy 8vo, cloth. 4<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> net.
-<i>T. Fisher Unwin.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c013'><b>49. Welfare Work: Employers’ Experiments for Improving Working
-Conditions in Factories.</b> By <span class='sc'>E. D. Proud</span>, B.A., Adelaide;
-D.Sc. (Econ.), London, with a Foreword by the Rt. Hon. <span class='sc'>D. Lloyd
-George</span>, M.P. 1916; xx., 363 pp., Demy 8vo, cloth. 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> net.
-<i>George Bell &amp; Sons.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c013'><b>50. Rates of Postage.</b> By <span class='sc'>A. D. Smith</span>, D.Sc (Econ.), London.
-1917; xii., 431 pp., Demy 8vo, cloth. 16<i>s.</i> net.
-<i>George Allen &amp; Unwin.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c013'><b>51. Metaphysical Theory of the State.</b> By <span class='sc'>L. T. Hobhouse</span>,
-M.A., Martin White Professor of Sociology in the University of
-London. [In Press.] <i>George Allen &amp; Unwin.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c013'><b>52. Outlines of Social Philosophy.</b> By <span class='sc'>J. S. Mackenzie</span>,
-M.A., Professor of Logic and Philosophy in the University College of
-South Wales. [In Press.] <i>George Allen &amp; Unwin.</i></p>
-<h3 class='c032'><i>Monographs on Sociology.</i></h3>
-
-<p class='c029'><b>1. The Material Culture and Social Institutions of the
-Simpler Peoples.</b> By <span class='sc'>L. T. Hobhouse</span>, M.A., Martin White Professor
-of Sociology in the University of London, <span class='sc'>G. C. Wheeler</span>, B.A.,
-and <span class='sc'>M. Ginsberg</span>, B.A. 1915; 300 pp., Demy 8vo, paper. 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>
-net. <i>Chapman &amp; Hall.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_344'>344</span><b>2. Village and Town Life in China.</b> By <span class='sc'>Tao Li Kung</span>,
-B.Sc. (Econ.), London, and <span class='sc'>Leong Yew Koh</span>, LL.B., B.Sc. (Econ.),
-London. Edited by <span class='sc'>L. T. Hobhouse</span>, M.A. 1915; 153 pp., Demy
-8vo, cloth. 5<i>s.</i> net. <i>George Allen &amp; Unwin.</i></p>
-<h3 class='c032'><i>Series of Bibliographies by Students of the School.</i></h3>
-
-<p class='c029'><b>1. A Bibliography of Unemployment and the Unemployed.</b>
-By <span class='sc'>F. Isabel Taylor</span>, B.Sc. (Econ.), London. Preface by <span class='sc'>Sidney
-Webb</span>, LL.B. 1909; xix. and 71 pp., Demy 8vo, cloth, 2<i>s.</i> net;
-paper, 1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> net. <i>P. S. King &amp; Son.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c013'><b>2. Two Select Bibliographies of Mediæval Historical Study.</b>
-By <span class='sc'>Margaret F. Moors</span>, M.A.; with Preface and Appendix by
-<span class='sc'>Hubert Hall</span>, F.S.A. 1912; 185 pp., Demy 8vo, cloth. 5<i>s.</i> net.
-<i>Constable &amp; Co.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c013'><b>3. Bibliography of Roadmaking and Roads in the United
-Kingdom.</b> By <span class='sc'>Dorothy Ballen</span>, B.Sc. (Econ.), London; an
-enlarged and revised edition of a similar work compiled by Mr. and
-Mrs. Sidney Webb in 1906. 1914; xviii. and 281 pp., Demy 8vo,
-cloth. 15<i>s.</i> net. <i>P. S. King &amp; Son.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c013'><b>4. A Select Bibliography for the Study, Sources, and Literature
-of English Mediæval Economic History.</b> Edited by
-<span class='sc'>Hubert Hall</span>, F.S.A. 1914; xiii. and 350 pp., Demy 8vo, cloth.
-5<i>s.</i> net. <i>P. S. King &amp; Son.</i></p>
-<h3 class='c032'><i>Series of Geographical Studies.</i></h3>
-
-<p class='c029'><b>1. The Reigate Sheet of the One-inch Ordnance Survey.</b>
-A Study in the Geography of the Surrey Hills. By <span class='sc'>Ellen Smith</span>.
-Introduction by <span class='sc'>H. J. Mackinder</span>, M.A., M.P. 1910; xix. and
-110 pp., 6 maps, 23 illustrations. Crown 8vo, cloth. 5<i>s.</i> net.
-<i>A. &amp; C. Black.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c013'><b>2. The Highlands of South-West Surrey.</b> A Geographical
-Study in Sand and Clay. By <span class='sc'>E. C. Matthews</span>, 1911; viii. and
-124 pp., 7 maps, 8 illustrations, 8vo, cloth. 5<i>s.</i> net.
-<i>A. &amp; C. Black.</i></p>
-<h3 class='c032'><i>Series of Contour Maps of Critical Areas.</i></h3>
-
-<p class='c029'><b>1. The Hudson-Mohawk Gap.</b> Prepared by the Diagram
-Company from a map by B. B. Dickinson. 1913; 1 sheet 18″ by
-22½″. Scale 20 miles to 1 inch. 6<i>d.</i> net; post free, folded 7<i>d.</i>,
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